Customer
Service Tips For Mail Order Business
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Based Business Ideas Part 3
Can we be too good to our customers? No way!
Our customers are the backbone
of our business! They're right no matter what!
But I'm sorry to disagree with you. As small,
honest and legitimate
businesses _ we have a tendency to place our product quality above
money.
While this is the "right" way of building a strong,
solid business; there
are customers that will try to take advantage of you. You have
to learn how
to notice this possibility coming and "bow out gracefully"
without losing the
customer.
Remember that most newcomers to the world of mail order think
that they are
ordering from BIG companies just because we have a company name!
They cannot
conceive how poor and struggling a lot of us really are. They
think we can
absorb costs and because they are poor themselves, will often
try and take
advantage of people like us. (If they only knew the many times
I have
personally had to hold an order up for mailing because I couldn't
afford
the 52c to mail it back, or the guy who bounced a $2 check and
caused a
close friend of mine to go "in the hole" $15 in bad
check charges.)
But because we are honest people who place
our product ABOVE money we
sometimes let people walk all over us. In fact _ a mail order
buddie of mine
(who distributes shareware computer disks) is normally so happy
when she gets
an order that she gives the customer almost 10 times more than
what they pay
for. She is so excited about keeping a customer that she goes
overboard to
make them happy.
Unfortunately, a lot of people will take
advantage of this situation.
They think, "Hey, if I can get this much for hardly nothing,
I'll see how
much more they'll give me. Look at all the "freebies"
I could get and all
the money I could save." They'll lose respect for you.
However, this line of thinking is only short term. Sure, as a
customer,
you might get some more free stuff with the next order, but pretty
soon
the business owner will realize what's going on. Then you'll lose
that
business contact forever! I can still recall the people who ripped
me off
before and I would NEVER do business with them again!
This is a sad situation!
As a dealer, you can learn to give your customers
what they pay for.
Go that extra mile on special requests, but never over-extend
yourself
if it means lost profits to your business. This line of thinking
will cause
you to set yourself up to be taken advantage of and then you'll
become
resentful toward your customers; which is bad.
Another friend of mine was so stunned by
landing an on-going, monthly
publication that she promised the customer "the moon"
without even having
to do so. When she lived up to all her promises she ended up paying
$215
out of her own pocket to publish each issue. Of course, she had
to cancel
her contract forever _ which is "bad business."
In mail order we all have the ability to
make ourselves look "richer" than
we really are. We can work co-op deals with other people to barter
and trade
for things we don't have and could never pay for. Then, when orders
are
filled professionally, the customer suddenly thinks the mail order
dealer
has a lot of money to spread around and can afford to lose a few
dollars on
them.
If a customer does not send the correct amount
for you to fill his or her
order _ simply write them a nice letter explaining that they did
not enclose
the proper amount. Send them an invoice showing the amount they
still owe
and bill them before filling the order.
If someone calls you up on the phone and
talks a "good" sales pitch (with
the intention of getting you to fill their order before they pay
you)
kindly explain that your company policy is to receive payment
first since
they are a new customer. No other explanation is necessary.
However, don't go overboard and get crazy.
If a new customer forgets to
enclose a 29c stamp, go ahead and send them information. It's
silly to spend
another 29c stamp yourself to tell them to send a 29c stamp. And
not filling
the order is also crazy. If the customer cared enough to write
in the first
place, you at least owe them a response. Besides, it might bring
a big order. Don't get hung-up over a stamp!
Some dealers refuse to take personal checks
because they are afraid they will
bounce. Again _ this is not good customer service since it's a
lot of trouble
to buy a money order when most people have checking accounts.
This line of
thinking will cost you lots of lost orders. However, you can hold
the check
for clearance before you fill the order if the amount is over
$25. Use common
sense and you'll make it!

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