Saturday, October 31, 2009

QUALITY RESTAURANT SERVICE

Randall Turner, a dear friend of mine, dines out at least twice a week and knows good service; he also knows when the wait staff is indifferent. A recent experience at a restaurant in the area made the evening memorable for all the wrong reasons.

"I was there with business associates and wanted to try a new restaurant that had been touted," he recalls. "The place was cavernous and the eight servers outnumbered the customers."


It was a warm night and the small group decided to sit outside. After a long wait the server appeared, filled their water glasses and disappeared. "We had to hunt for more water, bread and for the waiter so we could order," Barnard complains. "There were only two other customers in the restaurant that probably sat 150 people. We knew the servers were out there but we couldn’t see them. It was almost funny."


The service did not improve as the evening wore on.


"After the meal we ordered coffee and when it arrived sometime later I tasted something strange and sweet in the brew," he relates. "When I asked the server what it was she replied, ‘I don’t know what it is. It’s something.’"


Having to chase down the waiter for the bill was the icing on the cake.


Although the food was good, the quality of service soured the entire dining experience. It was a new restaurant and perhaps the staff was working out a few kinks, but Barnard says he likes to patronize a restaurant that will appreciate his business. "It is disappointing when the meal is superior but the service is not up to the same standards," he concludes. "That is what stands out in my memory."


www.yaseintl.com




Friday, October 30, 2009

Discipline and Decorum

We have all tried to tell our children what to wear, when it wear it, and how to wear it only to be shocked by their attitude towards conventional garb. What they enjoy wearing comes from the Salvation Army or Goodwill outlet stores and the more thread bare, the better.

A major challenge exists for restaurant operations as to what constitutes a proper dress code in today's world. You have sloppy, sloppy sloppy; casual, casual casual; business casual; upscale casual; casual formal; business formal; and formal formal. The industry is definitely struggling especially at the high end to determine "the rules of the road." With the increased casualization of our dress codes and with the ensuing informality of life in general, the restaurant industry has faced a myriad of changes or adjustments in their approach to their rules of discipline and decorum.

con referencia a:

"We have all tried to tell our children what to wear, when it wear
it, and how to wear it only to be shocked by their attitude towards
conventional garb. What they enjoy wearing comes from the Salvation
Army or Goodwill outlet stores and the more thread bare, the better. A
major challenge exists for restaurant operations as to what constitutes
a proper dress code in today's world. You have sloppy, sloppy sloppy;
casual, casual casual; business casual; upscale casual; casual formal;
business formal; and formal formal. The industry is definitely
struggling especially at the high end to determine "the rules of the
road." With the increased casualization of our dress codes and with the
ensuing informality of life in general, the restaurant industry has
faced a myriad of changes or adjustments in their approach to their
rules of discipline and decorum."
- Service Excellence: Discipline and Decorum (ver en Google Sidewiki)

Discipline and Decorum

We have all tried to tell our children what to wear, when it wear it, and how to wear it only to be shocked by their attitude towards conventional garb. What they enjoy wearing comes from the Salvation Army or Goodwill outlet stores and the more thread bare, the better.

A major challenge exists for restaurant operations as to what constitutes a proper dress code in today's world. You have sloppy, sloppy sloppy; casual, casual casual; business casual; upscale casual; casual formal; business formal; and formal formal. The industry is definitely struggling especially at the high end to determine "the rules of the road." With the increased casualization of our dress codes and with the ensuing informality of life in general, the restaurant industry has faced a myriad of changes or adjustments in their approach to their rules of discipline and decorum.

Today the industry fights a constant and confusing battle to determine the rules of dress code. Stories are told about restaurants requiring coat and tie only to find that exceptions are made on a regular basis.

Recently I dined in a most spectacular hotel restaurant. The bar had a beautiful mahogany look with displays of rare cognacs (snifter of Hennessey Ricard was priced at $275.00). The restaurant offered wonderful wines with a great sommelier, and presented a serious menu with even the knife, fork and spoon being ala Carte. A very genteel piano player played and sang gentle music while servers ran around answering your every request with "my pleasure". The dress code, according to one staffer, was coat and tie, and the first thing I noticed were guests with jackets and no ties. After two gin and tonics, it really did not matter.
 I ordered a wonderful esoteric salad with greens from the far reaches of the world. I followed up with a perfectly cooked strip steak, spinach with oil and garlic, and half a bottle of Sterling Diamond Ranch Cabernet.

At precisely 9:01 p.m. enter yuppie family with newly born. The gentleman was in his late thirties and was dressed in a golf shirt and slacks. The wife was in upscale, beach casual and the infant had a pacifier in mouth (for at least part of the time). When the pacifier fell out, the noise level drowned out the singer/piano, guests, wait staff, bartender, and one choking guest seated in the corner.

The issue is that while the family spent big, they lacked respect for the level of the restaurant, as well as their fellow guests, which made them disruptive to say the least. The moral of this story is that poorly communicated and fuzzy rules for dress code and decorum can come back to bite you badly where it hurts. It can cause the dissipation of one's restaurant business. Rules are standards and while management must make adjustments, they must uphold the integrity of their concept in order to maintain and perpetuate their success. This is especially true in concepts where even the knife, fork and spoon cost extra.














Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Customer Service Principle

Throughout business history, companies have introduced grand strategies designed to raise their levels of customer service. They soon discovered, however, that the strategies were the easy part. Getting employees to buy into the strategy and make it work proved more difficult. Not surprisingly, results were usually doomed to failure from the start. 

This inability to "close the deal" has been a perennial cause of puzzlement and frustration to company executives. They assumes that once strategies are unveiled, employees will implement the program in such a way that customers notice an increased level of customer service. 


Wrong. Not only do sales and service not rise; morale goes down with them! The reason? The assumption that customer service can improve without employee commitment. 


All too often, management forgets that strategies and programs start and end with their people. This assumption is a throwback to the thinking of the American Industrial Age when employees were reduced to a component of production, not unlike a piece of equipment. 


Industrial age thinking was based on the concept that employees did not want to work and were definitely not concerned enough to do quality work. Employees were given orders, and except for breakdowns (injury or illness), tasks were grudgingly completed.
Of course time has proven again and again that employees DO want to work, they DO enjoy their work, and they want to care about the quality of their work. Research has shown that work plays a huge part in a person's self esteem, self worth and personal happiness. 


To turn your strategy into reality, you must create an environment that builds employee pride and quality. It is absolutely vital that customer service be a long-term, everyday commitment that employees believe in. Otherwise, employees will think it just another passing management fad that will fade away after a brief flurry of activity like so many other programs. They've seen it all before and if they don't believe it, it won't succeed. 


To illustrate the difference in employee attitudes consider this parable. An observer passed by two job sites and asked one employee from each what they were doing. 



Employee one: I'm working like hell for too little money.
Employee two: I'm building a cathedral.
Notice any difference in attitude? One was sold on the project and therefore became part of it, while the other was merely a part of the machine. Which employee would you want representing your establishment?
Customer Service Principles: 

-Commit to excellent customer service. Live it, breathe it, believe it, and reward it.
-Sell the employees on the whole, not just their part.

-Ensure that any Marketing initiatives emphasize your employees, not just your products. When morale and pride go up, you can bet services and sales will go up. Make your employees feel they are part of an elite group.

-Ensure all customer contact employees have autonomy to accommodate their customers, even if it means bending company rules. Then take a hard look at those bent rules, and see if they need to be discarded entirely.

-Be better than your competitor by knowing your competitor. Take your key people out to a competitor's operation, and talk about what works there and what doesn't (after you've left, of course.)

-Finally, keep the focus on your people: They ARE your business!










Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Defining Customer Service: The Customer’s Perception Is Our Reality

You might not be able to define service, but you know it when you find it, and so do our customers. Countless seminars, books, and articles have been written on the subject of service. Every company touts service as its goal, but service is an elusive concept which is extremely difficult to measure and evaluate. Service is elusive and intangible but it is the life’s blood of the hospitality industry so we must ask ourselves, “What is customer service?” In today’s competitive marketplace service is the most important thing a company has to sell. It truly makes the difference when two businesses have the same product. If service was just smiling or getting food onto the table on time it would be difficult enough, but we know it is much more complex than that. We’ve been told over and over, every time we come in contact with a customer, that we make a good impression or a bad one for the organization we represent. The gurus have taught us that these are called the “moments of truth”. That being the case, the first moment of truth takes place with a genuine and personal touch as soon as the guest walks in the front door. This sets the tone for the rest of the experience, and if it gets even better, the dining experience will be unforgettable. If you consider the effect that one person can have on the entire experience, and multiply that by a dozen or more employees, the moments of truth have increased exponentially. The first rule of service is simply to find the right people with the right attitude, and then teach them the rest. Let’s face it, serving techniques can be taught; sophistication has to be acquired. It baffles me that during the interview process more employers don’t ask prospective employees what they think customer service means. Customer service is difficult to explain, and difficult to understand. The people who know best what customer service is, are customers, because they are the ones who know what they want. And because they are the ones who know what they want, it is the customers we should be listening to. Simply by accommodating the requests of your customers you create a demanding customer. And a demanding customer is not a bad customer. When you accommodate requests and your demanding customers go to another property, they’ll be disappointed if they don’t get the service equal to what you have created. Hence, demanding customers equal profits. As we continue to try to define customer service we find that there are some basic truths. To understand those truths you have to realize that customer service has to always be defined from the customer’s perspective, not the operator’s. In fact, we need to remember, the customer’s perception is our reality. We all know that successful service is not a one-time event; you have to work hard at it. It is only as good as your last encounter. It is a production and it goes on stage every day at the same time, and it’s live. There’s no practicing; there’s no rehearsing. Executives around the world recognize service as the most important tool a company can use to differentiate itself from the competition. Therefore, they also realize that the most important people in any company are those who provide service. J.W. Marriott Jr. said, “Service people are the most important ones in the organization. Without them there is no product, no sale, and no profit. Indeed, they are the product. Service is and should be a high calling.” We’ve all heard the phrase, “You never get a second chance to make a first impression.” The first thirty seconds sets the tone for the entire experience. The most important first step for anyone in our industry is creating a bond of trust and credibility with our guests. This is what we call rapport. The essence of rapport is commonality. People like people who are like themselves. If it’s true that almost everything you become and accomplish in your life is with and through other people, then the ability to create rapport with other people is the most important skill you can learn. That being said, it is easy to understand why the main challenge in our business is to manage these millions of moments of truth every day. That means managing hundreds of encounters with customers each and every shift, because it is in fact service that determines how much money they are going to spend and how much you’re going to make. It is important to remember that in every service opportunity there is a sales opportunity, and in every sales opportunity there is a service opportunity. You can have the best product in the world, but if you don’t sell it, you still have it. In this industry, we throw word “service” around like it’s a basketball. In the writing of this article, I feel like I’m preaching to the choir, but it comes back to that basic premise that it’s not what you know that matters, but doing what you know that matters. Caring is the golden key. You have to care that your guests get the best service and the best value, and that they have the best time they could possibly have. When the guests know you care about them, that’s when they’re on your team. There is nothing better than having the guests be on your team; it’s a win situation for everyone. Service is an intangible product. It’s a commodity that customers pay big money for these days and it’s a word that’s way overused. I recently read where it’s the most overused word in the world. “At one time in my life I thought I had a handle on the meaning of the word ‘service,’ the act of doing things for other people. Then I heard the terms ‘internal revenue service,’ ‘postal service,’ ‘civil service,’ ‘service stations,’ and I became confused about the word ‘service.’ This is not what I thought ‘service’ meant. Then one day I overheard two farmers talking, and one of them mentioned he was having a bull service a few of his cows. Voila! It all came into perspective, and I now understand what service is all about. Now I know what all those service agencies are doing to us.” -- Orionsky (pseudonym for on-line humorist and contributor to unsolvedmysteries.com) Service, service, service. We spend a lot of time and money on training and retraining our employees about the importance of customer service, but we really never tell them how simple it can be. In fact, it’s so simple it’s mind-boggling. I have what I call the Simplicity Rule of Customer Service and it goes like this: “All you have to be is hospitable.” Being hospitable is the act or practice of receiving strangers or guests in a friendly and generous way. It’s really that simple. All we have to do is hire people that are hospitable, and the rest comes easy. After all, we all know it’s easier to train the technical side than it is to train the personal side. In this industry, profits are not made by focusing on the larger details; profits result from focusing on small details and caring about the guests. You need to forget the macro, and focus on the micro. After all, when you really think about it, “It’s the small things in life that are big.”

Defining Customer Service: The Customer’s Perception Is Our Reality

You might not be able to define service, but you know it when you find it, and so do our customers. Countless seminars, books, and articles have been written on the subject of service. Every company touts service as its goal, but service is an elusive concept which is extremely difficult to measure and evaluate.

con referencia a: Blogger: Service Excellence - Create Post (ver en Google Sidewiki)

Deining an Employee's Duties

Many restaurats managers never take time out of their hectic schedules to wrtite job descriptions for their employees. But if they did, they would actually save a huge amount of time in the long run.

www.yaseintl.com

con referencia a:

"Many restaurant managers never take time out of their hectic schedules to write job descriptions for their employees, But if they did, they would actually save a huge amount of time in the long run."
- Service Excellence: Defining an Employee's Duties (ver en Google Sidewiki)