From my studies as an Executive MBA student and my professional experience, I have cultivated a genuine interest in understanding how a service excellence culture impacts an organization. Indeed, as backed up by current literature and research on the subject, fostering and implementing a service culture within an organization has an amazing positive impact on various aspect of a business.
Today you find abundant literature on customer service excellence. Two books that I have read and can recommend are The Zappos Experience and Outside In.
According to Outside In authors Harley Manning and Kerry Bodine, companies who lead in customer experience and truly "put customers at the center of their businesses" benefited from tremendous gains early on: over a 5-year period when the S&P 500 was flat, these businesses grew their stock portfolio by 22%. An amazing number in a time of recession, showing that companies who took early steps to efficiently embed a culture of "doing well" not only positively influenced their stock prices performance, but also reduced their debt costs and overall increased their revenues. The whole premise of Outside In lies in far more than just creating the artifacts of customer service via enhanced friendly communications towards consumers, it is about creating a complete company culture revolving around servicing them.
The Zappos Experience book goes a step further and concretely dives into how the company became not only a standard in customer service and online shopping experience, but truly became a household name because of its revolutionary take on servicing customers and tapping into employees - or Zapponians - to make it happen. Zappos' company culture has been able to do something few companies can achieve: permeating the walls of its corporation to become universally acclaimed among its customers, further leveraging this momentum into its marketing efforts. From an employee standpoint, things are pretty clear: either you belong to the Zapponian culture or you get a few thousand USD to leave voluntary the company. That means those who stay take their service excellence extremely seriously.
You might have heard already that only 12% of Fortune 500 companies survived between 1955 and 2015. Most companies were acquired, some completely defaulted and big names such as Nokia or Kodak nearly disappeared. This trend is still valid nowadays, with volatile markets and new players such as Uber, Airbnb or Teslawho have gained more market value in a decade than traditional big businesses. By means of innovation and disruption, companies can boom or go totally bankrupt, very fast, these days.
Coming back to service excellence culture: I have read hundreds of business cases on different companies, across a variety of industries, and one common ground for business success lies in an organization's ability to establish a strong culture of service excellence. One great example is South West Airlines, the largest low cost airline in the world operating in an industry with very low margins and where going bankrupt is not an exception. As a customer, you can really experience the firm's customer-centric approach: among big changes in the industry, they continue to allow two free checked bags per passenger, do not charge last minute flight changes and overall, equip their flights with free wifi and movie streaming and can consistently claim the lowest number of complaints across all US airlines. They are still a low cost airline - just as Ryanair - but does the latter carries the same image to you.
I used to work for one of the biggest online travel agents, very successful in terms of market shares. While the reasons why the company reached a dominant position greatly vary depending on who you ask, I personally experienced their constant focus on the customer. One of the values that was considered as most important is to place the customer first. If there was an issue with any traveler, no matter what was on your to-do list, this needed to be solved first.
Likewise we find this approach at Amazon. With Christmas period, even the directors and senior management help to package the goods to deliver the companies’ promise. All hands on deck! Somehow, this is an inspiration to be the industry reference and to show leadership by example.
To conclude, remember this: whenever a project comes, a winning approach is to set the customer always at the very centre. You may build an expensive five star hotel but what if the service level is not adequate? You lose. You may make a fantastic feasibility study with the greatest numbers, but what if the customer does not come? You lose.
*2018 Customer Service Expectations Survey, Gladly