“Because I Said So” Doesn’t Cut It
Build Bonds with Your Employees to Enhance Your
Customer Relationships

By: Bob Furniss, Touchpoint Associates

Relationships often define our happiness and our outlook on life. We are taught, from the time we enter kindergarten, that we must relate to others. We must share our toys, respect others’ space and defer to authority. College psychology professors teach us that our relationships with our parents will profoundly impact our levels of success in life. Romantic relationships open doors to new happiness or heartbreak. The one relationship that probably affects our daily lives more than any other is the relationship with a boss.

Almost everyone has had a bad relationship with a boss drive us away from what was otherwise a good job or company. But consider how many times you have hung on to a bad job when the relationship with your boss was strong!

In customer service jobs all across America, the relationship between the frontline employee and the direct manager is a key element in the happiness of the employee. In his book, Vital Friends: The People You Can't Afford To Live Without, Tom Rath evaluated more than 5 million Gallup surveys and found that “when employees have close friendships with their boss, they are more than twice as likely to be satisfied with their jobs.” This level of happiness converts into the positive treatment of customers, which drives the bottom line.

Relational leadership is not the easy way to manage; autocratic or dictatorial leadership is a much easier path to follow. Yet, while “because I said so” may have worked for my dad, it does not work with today’s employee. I have found, over the past 25 years, that most employees want to feel that they are adding value and having an impact on the success of the company. The best ones want to know “why” and want to be able to participate in making decisions.

The first step in relational leadership is to take the time to get to know your employees. What are their passions? What are their needs and aspirations in the job? The next step is to show your employees that their opinions and insight are valuable. Instead of demanding success, the frontline manager must coach the employee.

“More time with me”
As a consultant, I speak to customer service employees across America. When I ask them what they would like to change about their daily interactions with their managers, they most frequently say they’d like their bosses to “spend more time with me, to let me know if I am doing a good job and to help me understand how to do better.”

Ask yourself: Who was the best manager you ever worked for? Did he or she know you as a person? Did he or she care about your success and seek to support your aspirations in life?

Take this quick quiz to test your knowledge of your team: List the people who report to you, and write a sentence to answer the question for each team member in each of these areas:

• Person. What is his or her passion in life? What is the most important event in his or her personal life in the past three months?

• Player.
Is he or she a team player? What are the life skills that you can share with him or her that will allow this person to become a better player on your team?

• Performer. What can you do to help improve this employee’s skills? What is the one thing that you will focus over the next 30 days to allow this person to become a better performer?

Building relationships is not rocket science or a deep methodology for management skills. It’s merely a good approach to helping your people realize their potential. Follow in the footsteps of the great managers in your life; know your people and seek to support their successes and passions.

 

Cartoon of the Month

 


So many of you have written or called to ask about my son Kevin since the last newsletter that included
a story about his near-death experience in the F-4 tornado in March. He is doing well, as are all of the guys that were
trapped with him. Thank you so much for your thoughts and prayers over the past six months. His story was
chosen to be the first chapter in the new book by Tim Ellsworth, “God in the Whirlwind” published by Lifeway.
We continue to tell others that we are very blessed.



Strategic Consulting
When the economy is bad, consulting us usually the first thing that is removed from the possibilities.  But it is actually the best to seek our help.  Touchpoint Associates has helped hundreds of businesses reduce cost and increase efficiencies.  With more than 25 years of call center experience we know where to look for the “low-hanging fruit” and the long-term strategies.  Whether it is workforce management, new hiring and training plans or specific tactical ways to engage people to work more efficiently, we have answers.  Call Bob today at 901-230-0567 and schedule a free 30-minute consultation.  

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Operation Impact
When the economy is bad, consulting us is usually the first thing that is removed from the possibilities.  But it is actually the best time to seek our help.  Touchpoint Associates has helped hundreds of businesses reduce cost and increase efficiencies.  With more than 25 years of call center experience we know where to look for changes that bring both short-term and long-term impact.  the “low-hanging fruit” and the long-term strategies.  Whether it is workforce management, new hiring and training plans or specific tactical ways to engage people to work more efficiently, we have answers.  Call Bob today at 901-230-0567 and schedule a free 30-minute consultation.  

Operation Impact will dramatically improve the coaching and relationships with you’re your most important asset – your agents. Contact us today for a special summer pricing plan.

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Volume 1, Version 3, July 2008
© 2008 Bob Furniss

901.230.0567 • 6870 Dovefield Lane • Bartlett, TN 38135 • bob@bobfurniss.com
www.bobfurniss.com