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Five ways you, as a customer, can improve customer service

Here is one thing I believe in: customer service is not one way street.

Customers, as well as businesses they deal with, have an obligation to better customer service. Customer service cannot go from bad to good if the company doesn�t know that they are providing bad customer service. On the same hand, customer service cannot continue to be good or great if the company doesn�t know that they are already providing that level of service. It is important for the customer to communicate with whoever they are able to in order to help build good customer service relationships.

I�d like to share with you five ways that you, as a customer, can improve customer service in the places that you shop. Although the scope of this post is geared towards retail, restaurants, and industries where customer interaction is one-on-one, the basic tenets that I will describe can be applied to almost all of our business relationships.

Most of these ways should seem simplistic and obvious, but that’s the point. Talking to friends and family, it doesn’t seem that a lot of people are doing these incredibly simple and easy things that they can be doing to help businesses improve customer service.

For a little back story as to why I wrote this, check out my other post: On poor customer service and me being a poor customer.

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How Readers Find Blogs

As a blog author, I am always trying to increase my readership. In our blogosphere, there are tons of articles and resources devoted to ways that blogs can increase readership. But Tom Evslin has put together an informative post over at the Fractals of Change, called “How Readers Find Blogs. This kind of covers the other side of the coin and shows how fickle statistics can be at times.

He sums everything up nicely at the end when he says:

Somewhere in all this may be the secret to blogging fame and fortune. But notice in the graph above how fleeting fame is.

Fame is fleeting, ain’t that the truth.

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