A Quick Glance

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    Adopt a suitable structure for your Report

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    Write clearly and directly

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    Understand when formal and informal writing is related

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    Identify a Reports

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    Understand the aids of both language and scripts

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    Classify, collect, analyse and understand the related data and information correctly

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    Use graphics/visuals to improve the description

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    Design and make a description

Customer service is the role of taking care of the customer's needs by providing and delivering professional, helpful, high-quality service and assistance before, during, and after the customer's necessities are met. Customer service is meeting the wants and needs of any customer.

Customer service is an important slogan in the business world nowadays. Just about every company appears to realise just how important customer service is and have started to find means to grow and measure customer service.

Who should take this course

  • Frontline Customer Service Representatives (CSR)
  • Team supervisors
  • Department managers
  • Account managers
  • Field service representatives
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Prerequisites

This course has no prerequisites

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What Will You Learn

  • Identify key modules that promote customer retention and loyalty
  • Describe the practices of a world-class customer service provider and model their performance on those practices
  • Utilise interpersonal skills as vital implements in the provision of customer service
  • Communicate more efficiently by using dynamic listening and questioning skills
  • Set smart intentions and aims to increase daily throughput
  • Use stress management techniques to reduce tension
  • A shared organisational customer service vision
  • A streamlined customer service feedback system
  • Improved Intra/interdepartmental communication
  • Determine how to deal with demanding customers effectively
  • A highly motivated and focused workforce
  • Develop a customer-focused mindset for continuous improvement
  • Improved conflict resolution skills
  • Start the position of setting and reviewing customer service standards
  • Improve an understanding of internal and external customer expectations
  • Increased competency and communication skills
  • Increased customer retention and revenue growth
  • An improved growth for their role in helping their organisation reach customer service excellence
  • Increased confidence in their abilities to work professionally with difficult or upset customers
  • The insight to adjust their temperament style to become more versatile, adaptable and highly successful
  • Improved time management skills and increased productivity
  • Up to date methods and techniques to help them provide world-class service
  • Know the importance and significance of social media.
  • Know how to remain professional when on condition that customer service both in person and over the phone.
  • Know how to evaluate customer service through feedback and staff training.
  • Enhanced leadership and communication skills required to excel in their career
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What's included

  Course Overview

Customer service is listening to customers and assisting to resolve their problems so that they remain happy and loyal. Listening is such a critical, and sometimes unnoticed, part of customer service. Having worked in a call centre for five years, I have plenty of experience listening carefully to the needs of my customers before proficiently working to solve their problems and explain the results. Customers already begin feel taken care of when you listen wisely to their disquiets. Asking clarifying questions, repeating their concerns, and only quietly looking are helpful ways to demonstrate that you are listening and that you care about their problems.

 

Exam Info:

Type: Multiple Choice Question

Duration of Exam: 90 minutes

Pass Percentage: 45

 

 

 

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  Course Content

Introduction to Customer Service

  • Discriminate where a client ability expert chances in an organised organisation
  • Diagnose your role in providing excellent customer service
  • Define who the customers are and their expectation
  • Describe class customer service
  • Explain what the term customer supporter

Customer Service Fundamentals

  • Learn the consumer service transaction, model
  • Recognise how to notice to the consumer
  • Understand why asking open-ended questions is critical
  • Know why evaluating, and following up on a customer purchase is vital
  • See why communicating customer service issues with management is essential
  • Explain how a client deal takes place

Customer Communication Summary

  • Know that the clients have different communication networks
  • Learn why building understanding with his clients is supreme in as long as astonishing customer service
  • Recognise the different procedures for head-on vs. telephone communications
  • Know the most simple feature to communication

Customer’s Semantic

  • Match oral declarations to the exact communication places
  • Estimation customer situations to define best approaches
  • Match kinesthetic statements to the particular communication positions
  • Diagnose graphic, audio and kinesthetic arguments
  • Match visual reports to the precise communication channels

Setting the Values of Customer Service Excellence  

  • Benefits of providing excellent customer services
  • Importance of managing internal and external customer prospects
  • First impressions of customers
  • Knowing and working with the four customer styles

Service Recovery: Handling Complaints and Difficult Customers  

  • Importance of customer complaints and why they should be encouraged
  • Six steps to service recovery
  • Empower employees to get the job done
  • Strategies to help calm upset customers
  • Managing emotions during stressful situations

Principles of Persuasion  

  • Requesting feedback from clients and colleagues
  • Art of giving and receiving feedback
  • Five dimensions of customer service excellence
  • Negotiating mutually beneficial outcomes
  • Words and tones to avoid
  • Best practices for call managing, documentation and quality declaration
  • Measuring and monitoring for customer satisfaction

Getting the Right Customer Service Attitude  

  • Stress management tips to increase productivity
  • Set personal and professional goals
  • Importance of attitude and teamwork
  • Focusing on continuous improvement
  • Client service mission and vision

Communicating the Customer Service Message  

  • How well does your organisation communicate the position of customer service
  • Knowing customer’s nonverbal communication
  • Use questioning techniques to identify a client’s expectations and service requirements
  • Telephone tips to promote a professional image
  • The dos and don’t of written communication
  • Tips for building trust and rapport quickly face-to-face or on the telephone
  • Learning style
  • Developing your active listening skills to improve communications
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Introduction to customer service Enquiry

 

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Reach us at +44 1344 961530 or info@pentagonit.co.uk for more information.

About Gloucester

Gloucester is a county city in Gloucestershire located in the south-west of England. Gloucester deceits close to the Welsh border, on the River Severn, between the Cotswolds to the east and the Forest of Dean to the south-west. King Henry II granted its first charter in 1155. Frugally, the city is conquered by the service industries, and has a high monetary and business sector and was protuberant in the atmosphere manufacturing.

Geography:

Gloucester is the regional town of Gloucestershire. It is the 53rd largest settlement in the UK. Its population was 110,600 in 2002. By 2011 the city had a population of 121,900, and by 2012 its population was 123,400. Growth feasts outside city limits, with many remote regions. The 2011 survey reports the population of the Gloucester as 149,820.

The city lies on the eastern bank of the River Severn. It is sheltered by the Cotswolds to the east, while the Forest of Dean and the Malvern Hills rise to the west and north. The wharfs, granaries and the docks themselves fell into disorder until their face-lift in the 1980s. They now form a public open space. Some granaries now house the Gloucester Waterways Museum and others were rehabilitated into housing flats, shops and bars. Moreover, the Gloucestershire Museum's soldiers is located in the Custom House. Next to the gallery is Gloucester Yacht Club. The port motionless houses the most inland RNLI lifeboat in the United Kingdom.

Attractions:

Gloucester Cathedral, in the north of the city near the river, creates the basis of an abbey devoted to Saint Peter in 681. It is the burial home of King Edward II and Walter de Lacy. The cathedral is very famous as it was used in the films like Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets and much more. 

Many feudal and Tudor period gabled and half-timbered houses endure from previous eras of Gloucester's history. At the point where the four principal roads crossed stood the Tolsey, which was relieved by a modern building in 1894. None of the old public structures is left but for the New Inn in Northgate Street. It is a forested house, with strong, enormous external colonnades and patios. It was built around 1450 by John Twyning, a monk.

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