Articles database
 
 
Web AnyArticles.com
Browse by Category:
  Business >
  Subcategories
Advertising Advertising (536)
Branding Branding (350)
Careers Employment Careers Employment (1821)
Customer Service Customer Service (537)
Entrepreneurialism Entrepreneurialism (688)
Ethics Ethics (91)
Management Management (1711)
Marketing Marketing (1932)
Negotiation Negotiation (134)
Networking Networking (316)
PR PR (642)
Presentation Presentation (230)
Sales Sales (673)
Sales Management Sales Management (216)
Sales Teleselling Sales Teleselling (98)
Sales Training Sales Training (535)
Small Business Small Business (1284)
Strategic Planning Strategic Planning (367)
Team Building Team Building (236)
Top7 or 10 Tips Top7 or 10 Tips (256)


  Categories :
 
  Arts and Entertainment
  Automotive
  Business
  Communications
  Computers and Technology
  Finance
  Food and Drink
  Health and Fitness
  Home and Family
  Home Based Business
  Internet and Businesses Online
  Kids and Teens
  Legal
  News and Society
  Recreation and Sports
  Reference and Education
  Self Improvement
  Shopping and Product Reviews
  Travel and Leisure
  Womens Interests
  Writing and Speaking
  Random Category
  Politics
  Landscaping
  Funny stuff
Management article : Now Its The Employee (not the Customer) Whos Always Right!
 

Business > Management > Now Its The Employee (not the Customer) Whos Always Right!

0 Reviews [ add review ], Article rating : 0.00, 0 votes. Author : Ken Lizotte

It’s such a time-honored maxim it seems all but ordained by God. The customer is always right! Yes, a company’s most desirable objective must always be to keep its customers both loyal and happy. Certainly, it’s the secret to business success.

And how does one achieve this? By paying attention to your customers, i.e., serving them, listening, adjusting, responding. You do whatever they say, making sure your employees do the same. The customer pays the freight, after all… they must forever be number one.

So that makes a lot of sense, n’est-ce pas? “Good Business 101. Then again, hell, hmmm… maybe not! One major US airline company may be an indication that this long-held truism should be shipped out to relic-dom. At this company, you see, it seems the customer ain't always right at all—it’s the employee!

Let’s try a little quiz: Name the most successful major airline in America today, American, you say? Nah. United? Uh-uh. Delta? TWA? US Air? Wrong, wrong, wrong again! The very best airline today is a relative upstart called Southwest, based in Phoenix of all places. In fact, it’s the ONLY major airline to turn a profit in each of the last 25 years.

Southwest leads its industry in quite a few categories: It’s tops in price per earnings, for example (with a 27 rating it compares pretty well to American and Delta who each scored a pitiful 5), and it leads the pack too in on-time performance and in customer complaints, where it earns the fewest. Yet its President Herb Kelleher credits the company’s success NOT to an overarching concern for customers, as is usually a CEO’s boast. Herb e would surely be the first to brag about Southwest’s happy customers and how they do indeed count, but his primary kudos instead target the company’s mad, passionate commitment to fully support and nurture its employees.

Though it might be a stretch to say the company’s philosophy is, literally, the “employee is always right,” one could argue that the Southwest culture has hammered this axiom into place. Some Southwest executives have even been heard to say out loud, “Our employees come first and customers second.”

“We try to allow our people to be themselves and not have to surrender their personality when they arrive at Southwest,” Kelleher once explained to the media. “We deal with them as individuals.” One industry analyst explains, “Employees at Southwest are selected primarily for attitude, while most companies select primarily for skills. (Like employee-friendly Wal-Mart) they have a particular view for people who will fit into a team-oriented organization with its family feel and a certain degree of fun built in.”

It’s an appealing point of view. Think for a moment about your own responses to those you encounter throughout your management day: When you really think about it, where do the best ideas come from, your customers or your employees? Perhaps your firm conducts ongoing market research surveys and focus groups, as many do, but is the same spotlight and intensity ever pointed in the direction of workers? When it is, you’ll be on the Southwest track, and probably doing well. If it’s not, you may be missing out on a big one.

Ken Lizotte CMC is Chief Imaginative Officer (CIO) of emerson consulting group inc. (Concord, MA), which transforms consultants, law firms, executives and companies into “thoughtleaders.” This article is an excerpt from his newest book "Beyond Reason: Questioning Assumptions of Everyday Life".

Visit ==>www.thoughtleading.com for more info.


0 Reviews [ add review ], Article rating : 0.00, 0 votes. Author : Ken Lizotte
Rate this story : and read/post review(s)


Article reviews



Post your review
[ Note : no HTML/URLs - will removed automatically ]
Your name
Your comments


More articles from Business > Management

Add article | Manage Articles | Top Rated articles | Most Reviewed articles | Contact us | Links