A Customer Service Lesson in Peru!

Recently, I was privileged to spend 2 1/2 weeks in Ecuador and Peru in the Galapagos Islands and Machu Picchu. Little did I know I would have one of the most powerful customer service lessons of my career there!

As you know if you have traveled internationally, there are always individual vendors everywhere on the streets, trying to get you to buy their products. In some countries like China and Egypt, you are nearly accosted by them which is very uncomfortable. Even though they seemed a bit more gentle in South America, we were still wary of them, not wanting to be coerced into buying something we did not want.

After three days in Ecuador and travel to several of the little specialty craft villages where we did LOTS of shopping and then five days on the ship in the Galapagos Islands, we flew to Cuzco, Peru, where we did more shopping at the famous Pisac Market. Later, the bus took us to a lovely monastery where we were going to spend that night. The next morning we would board the train for Machu Picchu.

When we arrived that evening, outside the monastery there was a couple with their crafts, and they introduced themselves as “Mercedes” and “Mike 2.” We were all tired and not in the mood to purchase more, so Mercedes said, “Have a blessed evening, and we will see you tomorrow. Remember my name is ‘Mercedes’.”

The next morning there were Mercedes and Mike 2, waiting by our bus, trying to show us their goods, and again making sure we knew their names. We were all in a rush to get on the bus, so we did not pay a lot of attention to them, and besides, we had all done enough shopping. While we were waiting on the bus for our guide, Mercedes came to the windows and passed each one of us a little onyx (faux, I am sure!) necklace with a turtle on it since one of the primary attractions in the Galapagos are the giant tortoises. As she passed them out, she asked each of our names.

Then, she told us all, “In 4 days when you come back to stay in Cuzco, my shop is just down the street from the hotel on the righthand side.” (This was going to be a hotel in town, not the monastery in the country where we had stayed that night). “Just remember and ask for Mercedes.” Now, we had met many street vendors trying to sell us their goods, but never had we met anyone who GAVE us anything, so we were all impressed with her marketing and service skills.

After five wonderful days touring magnificent Machu Picchu, the most beautiful place I have ever been in the world, we flew back to Cuzco, and guess who was waiting outside our hotel? Mercedes and Mike 2, of course! Not only had she found out our schedule, but she remembered the names of nearly everyone on the bus and greeted us like old friends. Needless to say, we all went to Mercedes’s shop sometime while we were there and most of us bought something.

In the sea of needy and often pushy vendors, she had differentiated herself!

Things she did to serve us:

1. She introduced herself and her husband by name, and their names were memorable — “Mercedes” was not a name we heard often, and “Mike 2” is more memorable than just “Mike.”
2. She found out our schedule and was always there wherever we were going to be in her city.
3. She was not pushy, but she was persistent. She made SURE everyone knew her name and where her shop was.
4. She gave us something instead of only wanting us to buy. NO ONE else on the whole trip did that. It made her especially memorable.
5. She remembered our names and greeted us when we returned which created a kind of relationship.
6. Finally, when we did go to her shop, she offered us even more special prices than other vendors and then gave us another little trinket for choosing to “shop” with her.

Interestingly, we all thought we were “bought out” before we met Mercedes, but because of her service skills, we all ended up buying more! I suspect Mercedes and Mike 2 are doing very well in Peru! 😉

I will be writing more about my trip later in May here on the blog.

For more interesting articles on customer service, go to www.barbaraglanz.com/articles.

Autobiography

Someone just sent this to me today, and I thought how aptly it fits ALL of us as we continue this learning experience called life. I hope it causes you to think about your life as I have been thinking about mine.

AUTOBIOGRAPHY IN FIVE SHORT CHAPTERS
by Portia Nelson

CHAPTER I
I walk down the street.
There is a deep hole in the sidewalk
I fall in.
I am lost … I am helpless.
It isn’t my fault.
It takes me forever to find a way out.

CHAPTER II
I walk down the same street.
There is a deep hole in the sidewalk.
I pretend I don’t see it.
I fall in again.
I can’t believe I am in the same place
but, it isn’t my fault.
It still takes a long time to get out.

CHAPTER III
I walk down the same street.
There is a deep hole in the sidewalk.
I see it is there.
I still fall in … it’s a habit.
My eyes are open
I know where I am.
It is my fault.
I get out immediately.

CHAPTER IV
I walk down the same street.
There is a deep hole in the sidewalk.
I walk around it.

CHAPTER V
I walk down another street.

THE END
Today, I plan to take another street! How about you?

Blessings,
Barbara

To learn more about Barbara’s work, go to www.barbaraglanz.com.

Be Still!

I have always loved the Bible verse, “Be still and know that I am God.” Yet, how rarely do I practice it! We all get so busy with life that too often we run around the maze without thinking about where we are really going and why. I have been blessed to be on the National Advisory Cabinet for Guideposts and recently heard a thought-provoking talk by Rev. Paul Everett, who is married to Maggie Peale, Norman Vincent Peale’s daughter. It was titled “The Divine Nudge” and was about how many times God brings people into our thoughts and yet so often we fail to take time to listen and act on those “nudges.” We are just too busy! And because of that, we miss precious times of ministering and sharing and growing. The same is true for “listening” about the direction of our lives.

He quoted from the works of Henri Nowen, one of my favorite Christian writers:

“…Activities that can give us our routines and our security can also block out the ‘voice’ of correction and change…..we should be still – still in order to evaluate and hear. Thus a far greater challenge is not to DO, but to BE in the pace where we can hear; not hear the old and familiar, but to hear again what God thinks about our life’s direction, priorities, and activities, and to hear again what our heart is saying. This is often difficult for us. It is a struggle.

Yet hear new things we must! For we cannot simply continue to plunge headlong into the incessant round of activities that are no longer part of God’s creation for our lives and that no longer express our creativity and our central concerns.”

I have been thinking a lot about this concept recently. Each year I choose a theme for my year, and this year I chose “Rebuilding Relationships.” It is amazing to me how, when I AM listening, God has opened so many doors for me, out of my routine, to do just that. He has brought people from my past back into contact with me, He has given me extra time at home to schedule special sharing time with people I care about or want to know better, and He has provided work trips that will allow me to see people I love all over the country this year. Best of all, He has helped me give myself permission to have fun, too!

I have listened and made some changes in my life — I joined the Healthplex associated with the hospital here and am working out three times a week. (I have always walked on the beach and swum a mile in the pool when I was in town, but now I have something I can do even on the road, and I love that it is all computerized, so I can SEE my progress!) I have started sorting through papers and clothes and all those things that take up space in our lives. And most of all, I have taken a new attitude toward my work. Although I have a deep sense of mission about what I am doing, I have finally listened to the message that I do not have to do everything for everyone, and I do not have to work 18 hours a day when I am home.

I AM listening. Are you?????

Blessings,
Barbara

To learn more about Barbara’s work go to www.barbaraglanz.com.

Easter Groaners

A speaker friend just sent me these Easter groaners. Since this is Easter week, I thought I would share them with you to add a smile to your day:

How does the Easter Bunny stay fit? EGG-xercise and HARE-robics!
What’s the difference between a counterfeit dollar bill and a crazy rabbit? One is bad money, the other is a mad bunny!
Why did the Easter egg hide? He was a little chicken!
Why shouldn’t you tell an Easter egg a joke? It might crack up!
What’s yellow, has long ears, and grows on trees? The Easter Bunana!
How can you tell where the Easter Bunny has been? Eggs (X) marks the spot!
How do you catch the Easter Bunny? Hide in a bush and make a noise like a carrot!
What do you call a rabbit that tells good jokes? A funny bunny!
What’s the best way to send a letter to the Easter Bunny? Hare mail!
How does the Easter Bunny travel? By hare plane!
What did the rabbit say to the carrot? It’s been nice gnawing you!
How do you know carrots are good for your eyes? Have you ever seen a rabbit wearing glasses?
Why did the bunny go to the dance? To do the bunny hop!
What kinds of books do bunnies like? Ones with hoppy endings!
Why is a bunny the luckiest animal in the world? Because it has four rabbit’s feet!
What happened when the Easter Bunny met the rabbit of his dreams? They lived hoppily ever after!
Why did the Easter Bunny cross the road? Because the chicken had his Easter eggs!
Why did the Easter Bunny cross the road? To prove he wasn’t chicken!
What do you call a dumb bunny? A hare brain!

Oh, my, did you groan???? Have a blessed Easter.
Barbara

To learn more about Barbara’s serious work, go to www.barbaraglanz.com