Thursday 2 May 2019

How to Win Every Customer’s Heart

Every service industry wrestles with one problem that is central to everything else we do. We pay a lot of advertising money to draw people to our establishment or service only to have them greet an unhappy employee who is really not equipped to turn them into a lifelong customer by their smile and their actions. In fact, in some cases it might be better to have no one there than to risk having a negative (or at least a not positive) interaction.  

I have learned through my four decades in the service business that success comes down to this little triad: LOVE your customers. SERVE them unconditionally. WIN their hearts. Do this and something magical happens. 

So, how do we make this happen in our business? Let’s start with what we make our employees believe about our mission. And, yes, you are on a mission.  

Cast a Vision that Starts at the Top

As leaders, it’s important that we set the culture at the company so that everything we do resembles putting others before ourselves. This flows from genuinely caring about those we come in contact with, and it must be at the core of what we do. There will always be issues at work, just as there are always issues in life. How we handle these issues will vary greatly based on whether or not serving others first—even our most challenging associates—is at the core of who we are and what we do. For job commitment with a purpose, we must teach character, not success, focusing on building character, not characteristics.

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What does this look like in reality? While one business culture focuses on character—humility, servanthood, and kindness—another focuses on the process and convenience of the franchise. One is based on the heart of the business while the other is based on the mechanics of the business.

What can we learn from this? It starts with the leadership and flows up through the team to our guests. We can’t expect our team members to follow our lead to live out the spirit of hospitality in our service to others if we don’t walk the talk ourselves. We must model it by living it. We must be the first to do what we expect others to do when they’re looking to us for direction and leadership. And this starts with the CEO and his leadership team, not just at the local establishment leadership level. If we want our team members to go above and beyond our expectations, we must set them up for success by leading by example and training them to do their jobs in like manner.

The way to introduce quality service standards is through a robust training program. We need to train our new team members not only in the skills necessary to do their jobs, but also in our company’s culture. People need to know the “Why” and we need to be able to explain that to them in a simple and powerful way. That means, of course, that we need to know the why. Take the time to figure this out. Then share it often with your employees. 

You’ll instill in them purpose and empathy and you’ll start building a growing tribe of engaged customers. Let’s talk about each of these vital aspects of the customer service experience. 

Purpose

Without vision, people don’t know what they’re supposed to aim for. What’s our common goal? What do we want to achieve in business? What’s our business philosophy? Our team members should be well aware of these, and this information should not only be central to all training, but it should also be repeated frequently throughout every day, at every staff meeting, in every email communication, and … well, you get the point. The Ritz Carlton is known for this. At the start of their day, the Ritz Carlton teams gather for their Daily Lineup. During this fifteen-minute gathering, they do three things. They hear what is happening at a corporate level and what is happening at the local hotel—such as a memorable story of how putting their vision to work has affected a guest. They also review their twenty core values.These values are always within the team members’ sight and hearing. There is never an excuse for the team members to not know how to respond in any given situation in order to accomplish the Ritz Carlton Golden Standard of Service. They are ladies and gentlemen serving ladies and gentlemen.[i]

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When we’re looking to hire, our potential team members need to be willing to sign off on our mission statement, agreeing that they know the standards our company strives for and are willing to exemplify those standards no matter what they are putting their hands to do any time they’re on our property. The outcome of training and development of front-line crew members should reflect the values of the owners.

But knowing our business isn’t enough. Team members also need to know and understand their purpose in their position. The goal is to provide a seamless delivery of our product or service. For that to happen, each team member needs to know what they’re responsible for and how to best serve in that position. This can only happen if we point out that purpose during their training. We’ll discuss this more in the upcoming section about roles and goals.

Empathy

Whether we’re training our team members or they are serving our guests, empathy is extremely important. It has been said that people don’t care how much you know until they know how much you care. It’s true. We must first show we care about the person we’re communicating with. If we’re human, we understand that when we’re dealing with a difficult situation, we want someone to understand how we feel in that moment, and we don’t want to be judged for feeling that way. It’s a very vulnerable place to be. The knowledge that we care about their concerns also builds trust.

Let me share a true story that I think really exemplifies what I am talking about. Unbeknownst to the hotel staff, a gentleman would be scouting their facilities for an outstanding brand in a particular industry that held annual conventions and wanted a new place to hold one. Upon his arrival, the front desk associate realized his room wasn’t available due to overbooking. The gentleman hit the ceiling. When the front office leader heard the commotion, he took the initiative to come out from behind the counter, introduce himself to the guest, and profusely apologize for the oversight.  He asked the gentleman if he could have a couple of minutes to resolve the issue and turn around the negative situation. Within moments, the leader had a hotel limo take the guest across the street to another of the corporation’s properties, where they paid for him to spend the night. The next morning, the leader brought him back to an upgraded suite, chocolate-covered strawberries, champagne, and a written apology to him. The hotel also picked up the bill. Due to their excellent service recovery, the gentleman brought back multi-million dollar accounts. Again, the hotel staff didn’t know he was scouting their property until after the fact. Yet, they took care of him as a person first.

That’s a great lesson that we can replicate in any service business. 

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We must train our team to consider the person first and the business second. Ask if there’s something we can do to help make the person feel better. “How may I serve you?” is the appropriate hospitality statement in this situation. If the guest responds in anger, frustration, or grief—we’ve all seen one blow up, growl, or break down and cry at one point or another—stating that we understand their (insert emotion here) and would love to help resolve the situation will go much further than responding in like kind. This is why putting others before ourselves at all times is so incredibly important in the spirit of hospitality. It doesn’t matter how ridiculous their request may sound to us. It doesn’t matter whether company policy allows such-and-such response. What matters is making the guest feel important enough for someone to empathize with their felt need and work with them to amend it.  

Love. Serve. Win. 

We are all operating in a different hiring environment now. For the first time in my lifetime there are more available jobs than people to fill them. Wages are rising because of supply and demand. That means that every employee we can convince to work for us is gold. It’s always been true, but never more so than now. 

So, teach them the “Why” for your organization, how it sees its customers, and what the mission is. Empower them to not just satisfy your customers, but to elate them. Then, spend your advertising dollars knowing that when they work and people come to your establishment that they will become customers for life. 


How to Win Every Customer’s Heart posted first on happyhourspecialsyum.blogspot.com

Is Your Restaurant Ready to Host Corporate Events? Here’s A Guide to Get You There

Work, meetings, and training isn’t just taking place in corporate offices anymore. Companies are turning to outside venues — especially restaurants — to provide experiences and an inviting atmosphere away from cubicles and meeting rooms.

Your restaurant is poised to make a great profit from this trend. According to the CWT Meetings & Events 2019 Meetings & Events Future Trendsreport, the 2019 meetings market will increase by 5 to 10 percent.

If you haven’t been hosting corporate meetings and events, you can quickly become a preferred venue in your community by following a few best practices. Here’s our guide on how you can appeal to corporate event planners:

Update Your Spaces and Amenities

Companies are searching for venues that have the right amenities, and they’re going to have different needs than clients who are only booking social events. 

Corporate event planners need venues that have a variety of spaces that can accommodate different types of meetings, from a small group or board meeting, all the way to a large conference with several hundred attendees. Smaller events may need a quiet area or private room with one large conference table, several smaller tables, or rows of chairs facing a podium. Large conferences typically need a huge room that can fit hundreds of people for the day, and possibly those smaller rooms for side meetings or breakout sessions.

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In addition to the spaces, corporate events require technology for presentations and trainings at these meetings, so make sure you have sufficient wifi, screens with projectors that can easily connect to a laptop, microphones, and a sound system.

Not all corporate events are about work. Companies may also contact you to book networking events, cocktail parties, staff retreats, lunches, and dinners, and your existing dining room or private rooms could be a perfect fit.

Provide the Right Information Online

Event planners are working nonstop, booking for multiple clients at once, so doing an initial search online is their first step towards researching a new venue. 49 percent of event planners use the Internet as a primary way to find and book venues.

Make sure your restaurant appears in their search by using the right keywords on your website: your city, state, neighborhood, cuisine, types of events you host (including corporate, meetings, networking, conferences, and cocktail parties), your available spaces (boardroom, meeting space, dining room, private room, banquet room, patio, rooftop, lounge) and what type of venue you are (restaurant, event space, cocktail lounge, recreation, meeting space, etc.). The more you talk about those keywords on your website, the more search engines will associate your site with those words, and you’ll have a better chance of ranking at the top of a search.

Sharing photos, room options, floor plans, amenities, and menus is a must — corporate planners will use this information in a presentation on possible venues that they provide their clients. Include photos that show your space without a setup, with an event setup, and during an event so the planner and the client can have a sense of what their event would look and feel like if they booked your venue.

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Don’t stop with your website. Your event information should also be included on venue listings sites, your social media profiles and posts, Google My Business, and any other platforms that you’re using in your marketing. You never know where planners may find information about your business.

And of course provide contact information for your event staff as well as an event booking lead form so planners can get in touch with your venue right away.

Communicate Quickly

One of the biggest pain points we’ve heard from event planners is the delay or lack of response from venues when they send an inquiry. Someone from your venue should be monitoring emails and booking form responses every day and provide an answer as soon as possible. If they don’t hear from you, they’re going to book the first venue that fits their client’s needs.

Go a step further to stand out by using event management software to communicate with event planners. You can upload documents, menus, private event package options, floor plans, photos, and more to your account. Then, create email templates that include all of that information and send them easily to anyone who inquires about events at your venue. 

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Connect with Your Community

Local Chambers of Commerce, convention centers, and hotels have relationships with companies and conferences that are likely to hold events in your area. Introduce yourself to these organizations and let them know that your venue is available for private dining. You may also want to host a corporate or business open house at your venue so they can see what you offer in person.

Get Started and Grow Your Revenue

Off site corporate events are here to stay and the need for new and different restaurant locations will only continue to grow. It takes a bit of initiative and marketing, but if you follow our guide, you can make your venue a preferred vendor for corporate events and meetings. 


Is Your Restaurant Ready to Host Corporate Events? Here’s A Guide to Get You There posted first on happyhourspecialsyum.blogspot.com

Wednesday 1 May 2019

Should Your Restaurant Start Accepting Bitcoin?

Bitcoin is a popular digital payment system that utilizes peer-to-peer technology to manage monetary transactions on a decentralized platform rather than a centralized authority. You might have encountered a patron who insisted on paying in Bitcoin and didn’t know how to handle it.

With more than 46,000 merchants accepting Bitcoin across the globe, the popularity of the cryptocurrency is clearly on the rise. It’s about time the restaurant and catering industries jump on the bandwagon. 

Should Your Restaurant Accept Bitcoin?

Restaurants and cafes that accept Bitcoin enjoy a number of benefits. First, if you’re an advocate of cryptocurrency and you want its usage to grow, you will be happy to accept Bitcoin payments and become part of the pioneering promoters. Again, you are likely to attract like-minded clientele while giving your customers more payment choices. Even if some of your customers don’t know about Bitcoin, they will appreciate the fact that you offer multiple payment options. Let’s look at the case of Danish restaurants to see how European pioneers are doing.

Danish Restaurants Embracing Bitcoin

More than 1,500 restaurants in Denmark accept Bitcoin for online orders. Known globally for its award-winning cuisine, Denmark is extremely Bitcoin-friendly when it comes to foods and drinks. Hungry.dk is an online food chain that accepts Bitcoin for a variety of foods ordered from more than 1,500 restaurants. While most of these restaurants don’t accept Bitcoin on-premise, Bitcoin users can be happy to make their orders online and have their favorite foods delivered to their doorsteps. The improved stability of the coin over the years reassures restaurant owners that accepting BTC is a real, if not especially profitable option. 

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Despite its current stability, only a few years back the coin was extremely volatile, and that’s not necessarily a bad thing. Remember the Bitcoin pizza story where a programmer bought two pizzas for a value of 10,000 BTC (valued at $30 in 2010). Less than a decade down the line, those two pizzas would cost more than $38 million. Will the Bitcoin miracle happen again? Hard to say. But so far it’s looking good in the first quarter of 2019, so accepting Bitcoin, a global currency, is likely to benefit your business as an investment to counter the risk of local economic downturns.

How to Start Accepting Bitcoin

Now, to begin accepting Bitcoin in your restaurant, you need to sign up for a merchant Bitcoin wallet. Websites like BitcoinPayCoinGate, and BitPay provide easy-to-use wallets that integrate with many point-of-sale (POS), e-commerce systems like Shopify and Magneto, and various shopping carts.

When users make payments through these applications, they do so through a QR code that is scanned by the payer to send bitcoins to your wallet. Depending on the POS or bookkeeping system you use, the bitcoins can be automatically converted to USD for easy accounting and tax calculations.

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After setting up the system to accept Bitcoin in your restaurant, the next step is to let your clientele and other potential customers know about the new payment method. You can do that with simple signage on your restaurant or on your website and social media sites. There are a number of websites that track businesses that accept Bitcoin, and it’s very helpful to get your business on those maps. Good examples are Coinmap.org and SpendBitcoins.

The original purpose of Bitcoin is to provide a peer-to-peer digital currency. So, it should be treated just like cash. As more people come to this realization and begin to spend their coins on everyday needs like food, traveling, and recreation, more businesses will fully benefit from the innovative currency.


Should Your Restaurant Start Accepting Bitcoin? posted first on happyhourspecialsyum.blogspot.com

How to Win Every Customer’s Heart

Every service industry wrestles with one problem that is central to everything else we do. We pay a lot of advertising money to draw people ...