| |
A Customer Culture is Built on a Service Ethic
By: Jim Clemmer
Jim Clemmer is an international keynote speaker, workshop leader, author, and president of The CLEMMER Group, a North American network of organization, team, and personal improvement consultants based in Kitchener, Ontario, Canada. His other bestsellers include Firing on All Cylinders: The Service/Quality System for High-Powered Corporate Performance, and his most recent book, Growing the Distance: Timeless Principles for Personal, Career, and Family Success. His web site is http://www.clemmer.net/ |
"Rank is an appointed position. Authority is an earned condition. Rank is decreed from above. Authority is conferred from below. Authority vanishes the moment those who bestow it stop believing, respecting, or trusting their appointed boss, though they may defer out of fear." — Ted Levitt, Thinking About Management There are many reasons that teams and organizations haven't developed a culture of intense focus on their customers and partners. Some are management issues — they don't have the right tools and techniques or they haven't established disciplined listening and response systems and processes. In these cases, managers don't know how to become more customer and partner-focused. They don't have the way. But the root cause of poor or just mediocre customer service goes deeper. It has to do with will. Most managers don't focus on their customers and internal/external partners because they're too busy managing. They've become Technomanagers focused first on technology and management systems. Technomanagers don't want to serve, they want to control. They lord over and boss people. Technomanagers act as if (their words may say something very different) people (customers, partners, and everyone in their organization) serve their technology and management systems. Psychologist and Forbes columnist, Srully Blotnick, spent twenty-seven years following the lives of 6,981 men. In his book, Ambitious Men: Their Drives, Dreams, and Delusions, he writes, "It's difficult to say to someone, 'I am your humble servant,' and in the next breath hit them with, 'but I am also your social superior'... 45 percent of all the ambitious and talented men we studied who failed did so because of difficulties directly connected with the simultaneous pursuit of these two goals." Effective leaders know that without disciplined management systems and leading edge technologies, outstanding service is nothing but a dream. But they act on a belief system that management systems and technology exist to serve people. This is an extension of the effective leader's personal purpose built around the key service principle that success comes through serving others. Servant Leadership "I don't know what your destiny will be, but one thing I know; the only ones among you who will be really happy are those who will have sought and found how to serve." — Albert Schweitzer
©
Copyright 2001 The CLEMMER Group
Books by Jim Clemmer (You are viewing the U.S. bookstore. Click here to view the Canadian store.)
| Other Articles by Jim Clemmer |
- You're Getting the Behavior You Designed
- Why Smart Managers Master the Art of Listening Well
- Why Real Leaders Pump Gas
- Why Most Training Fails
- Who Are You and What Do You Want?
- What We Get is What We See
- What We Get is What We Are
- Strategic Planning Smothers Innovation
- Measurement Traps
- Managing Things and Leading People
- Leadership Lost
- Keys to Personal, Team, and Organizational Transformation
- How Total is Your Quality Management?
- How To Make Effort Rewarding
- Growing the Leader in Us
- Getting it Together: Integrating Customer Focus, Involvement, and Horizontal Management
- Exception is a Poor Rule
- Don't Wait to See the Blood
- Developing a Team or Organization Vision
- "Change Management" is an Oxymoron
- Managing the Reengineering-Incremental Improvement Paradox
- Process Management Improves the Horizontal Flow
- Process Management Pathways and Pitfalls
- Process Management Pathways and Pitfalls
- Balancing Top-Down and Bottom-Up Change Processes
- Change Management Can Lead to Rigidity and Resistance to Change
- Interested in Leadership, or Committed to Becoming a Leader?
- Mastering Change Through Continuous Growth, Learning, and Improvement
- Nurturing Change Champions
- Organizational Changes to Deal with Whirlwinds of Change
- Paradoxical Balancing Acts in Organization Improvement
- Successful Change Flows from Learning, Growth, and Development
- Why Most Change Programs and Improvement Initiatives Fail
- Balancing Technology, Management, and Leadership
- Innovation Calls for Leadership
- Inspiring and Energizing with Strong Verbal Communications
- Leaders are Learned Optimists
- Technomanagement: A Deadly Mix of Bureaucracy and Technology
- Visions Provide the Energizing Context to Reach Our Goals
- How Many Companies Lose That Loving Feeling
- Leaders Care for Organization Culture and Context
- Organizational Visioning Pathways and Pitfalls
- Passionate Leaders Rally People to the Cause
- Pathways and Pitfalls to Giving Personal Recognition and Appreciation
- People Live Up or Down to a Leader's Expectations
- Pathways and Pitfalls to Living Organizational Values
- The Purpose-Profit Paradox
- Three Core Questions That Define Organizational Culture
- Casual, Moderate, and Intense Levels of Customer/Partner Focus
- Customer Intimacy and Empathy are Keys to Innovation
- Customer Service is a Timeless Key to Profitability
- Innovation and Organizational Learning Pathways and Pitfalls
- Innovation and Organizational Learning Pathways and Pitfalls
- Innovation and Organizational Learning Pathways and Pitfalls
- Three Basic Steps to Focus on Customers and Partners
- You Can't Build a Team or Organization Different from You
- Goal Setting Can Limit Our Flexibility and Learning
- My Approach to Personal Time Management and Organization
- Pathways and Pitfalls to Setting Organizational Goals and Priorities
- The Tyranny of the Urgent Can Cause Priority Overload
- Use Strategic Imperatives to Set Improvement Priorities
- Change Checkpoints and Improvement Milestones
- Improvement Planning for Taking Charge of Change
- Improvement Planning Pathways and Pitfalls
- Improvement Planning Pathways and Pitfalls
- The Law of Improvement Displacement
- Decentralized Organization Structures Empower and Energize
- High Performance Organization Structures and Characteristics
- Organization Structure Limits or Liberates High Performance
- Systems and Structure Pathways and Pitfalls
- Organizational Measurement and Feedback Pathways and Pitfalls
- Organizational Measurement and Feedback Pathways and Pitfalls
- Strategic Measurements Guide Change and Improvement
- An Educational Process for Change and Improvement Efforts
- Communication Strategies, Systems, and Skills
- Education and Communication Build Commitment
- Education and Communications Pathways and Pitfalls
- Personal Education and Communication Pathways and Pitfalls
- A Process for Continuous Innovation and Controlled Chaos is Built on a Service Ethic
- Innovation and Learning Through Successful Failures
- Innovation Champions, Skunkworks, and Organization Learning
- Organizational Skill Development Pathways and Pitfalls
- Leadership Keys to Harnessing the Power of Teams
- Matching Team Types and Focus
- Pathways and Pitfalls to Leading Teams
- Reward and Recognition Pathways and Pitfalls
- Reward and Recognition Reinforce Paternalism or Partnerships
- Weak Leaders Try to Use Money as a Motivator
- Blazing Our Own Improvement Path
- Always on the Grow
- Persistence Goes the Distance
- Purposeful Leaders Make Meaning
- Successful Failures
- Hypocrisy and Egotism: Me-Deep in Fooling Myself
- Strong Leaders are Strong Communicators
- Honesty and Integrity Build a Foundation of Trust
- Leaders Shape Focus and Context
- The Motivation Myth
- Deepening Our Discipline
- Measuring Organizational and Team Energy Levels
- Growing with Change
- Two Keys to Adding Values
- Blame Management for Poor Service
- Blocks to Customer Focus
- Don't Promise Too Much
- Morale Problem? Look in the Mirror
- The View from the Front Line
- That Empower Word Again
- Wise Managers Treat Layoffs as Last Resort
|
The author assumes full responsibility for the contents of this article
and retains all of its property rights. ManagerWise publishes it here with
the permission of the author. ManagerWise assumes no responsibility for
the article's contents.
|
|