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	<title>Web strategy with the BetterServiceBlog &#187; client friendly</title>
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		<title>The Pool Shop</title>
		<link>http://betterserviceblog.com/the-pool-shop/</link>
		<comments>http://betterserviceblog.com/the-pool-shop/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 30 Nov 2008 07:27:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Allan Ward</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Value]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[client friendly]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://betterserviceblog.com/?p=66</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Does your business make it easy for clients to do business with you? Are there things you could do better to make your business more customer-friendly? At home, we have a swimming pool. Here in Australia, we&#8217;re coming to the start of summer so we&#8217;ve taken the winter cover off the pool and are starting...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Does your business make it easy for clients to do business with you? Are there things you could do better to make your business more customer-friendly?</em></p>
<p>At home, we have a swimming pool. Here in Australia, we&#8217;re coming to the start of summer so we&#8217;ve taken the winter cover off the pool and are starting to clean it and get it ready for the first hot spell of summer.</p>
<p>My wife took a sample of our pool water to a pool shop earlier this week and came home with a bunch of chemicals and instructions on how to clean up the pool water.</p>
<p>We started adding the first round of chemicals and tested the water and discovered the ph levels &#8211; which had been too high &#8211; were now very low. We&#8217;d obviously added too much acid and reduced the levels too far.</p>
<p>So today (Sunday) I took another sample to a different pool shop. You see, around where we live there aren&#8217;t too many pool shops open on a Sunday.</p>
<p>I walked into the shop and discovered two things &#8211; it was empty (apart from me and the staff), and they had a big sign up that said &#8220;No Water Testing On Sundays&#8221;.  I talked with a staff member and they agreed to test the pool sample and tell me what was wrong with the water.  10 minutes and $45 later I walked out of the shop with a fresh lot of pool chemicals and directions on how to increase the pH level of the pool.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s what I find a bit strange about this experience.  Firstly, I&#8217;m quite surprised that very few pool shops actually open on Sundays.  The way I see it, most people do their pool maintenance on weekends, so I would have thought that would be a peak time for pool place to be open.  Most hardware shops experience their busiest times on the weekend &#8211; why would a pool shop be any different?</p>
<p>Secondly, if you&#8217;re going to go to the effort of differentiating your business by bothering to open on Sunday, why don&#8217;t you test water?  You see, the home test kits for pools only measure the chlorine levels and ph levels.  So if I do a home test and then decide I need to buy some chemicals, I&#8217;ll go to the pool shop with a set shopping list, buy what I want and then leave.  The tests that the pool shops do, are a lot more comprehensive and test the alkalinity and calcium levels.  This means that the more things they measure, the more things I need to fix in my pool and the more chemicals I have to buy.  By doing a pool water test, the pool shops have the opportunity to open up a conversation with me that could ultimately result in them making a bigger sale.</p>
<p>So why don&#8217;t they offer the water testing?</p>
<p>Maybe they&#8217;re concerned they don&#8217;t have enough staff to cover the selling and the testing?  That&#8217;s the only reason I can thing of.  The solution to that is pretty simple &#8211; employ more staff if you need to, but promote the fact you&#8217;re open and testing water on a Sunday.  This particular pool shop has a good mailing list (I know because I&#8217;m on it), and they could easily write to hundreds of customers telling them about their Sunday pool testing service and the benefits of getting a comprehensive water test done monthly.</p>
<p>As a side note, I was impressed with the fact that the staff member had the initiative to test my pool water.  I&#8217;ve talked in <a title="What Clients Want" href="http://betterserviceblog.com/2008/11/17/what-clients-want/" target="_blank">previous articles </a>about the things to do to exceed your client&#8217;s expectations, and I was impressed that she did.  She was responsiveness and she did demonstrate empathy.</p>
<p>So, in your business, what things do you do that aren&#8217;t customer friendly?  What&#8217;s your equivalent of not testing the pool water on a Sunday?  In my financial planning business I&#8217;m wondering if there&#8217;s an opportunity to stay open late one night a week, so clients who find it difficult to come in during the day have a chance to come in to see us.</p>
<p>What do you think?  What can you change to become more client-friendly?</p>
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