Saturday, September 1, 2012

Apple: Genius at making customers feel good


A number of articles lately have attempted to convey the full measure of Apple's unprecedented streak of business success. Perhaps the most mind-blowing factoid about the company's value came this week from Kontra, via Twitter: at the time of his tweet, Apple's market capitalisation had exceeded that of Google, Facebook, Microsoft and Amazon – combined.


One reason for that phenomenal success is, of course, Apple's products. Another is its customer service, namely the Genius Bar, where bright-faced young geeks win customers' hearts and build brand loyalty that Apple's competitors can't match.


To wit, a section of the manual under the subheading "Empathy Exercise 2 - Techniques" introduces "The Three Fs: Feel, Felt and Found." A sample conversation from the handbook:


Customer: This Mac is just too expensive.


Genius: I can see how you'd feel this way. I felt the price was a little high, but I found it's a real value because of all the built-in software and capabilities.


This tactic dovetails nicely with the section of the manual on things to avoid saying and doing. For instance: "Do not apologise for the business  the technology." Instead, empathise: "I'm sorry you're feeling frustrated," or "Too bad about your soda spill accident."


Biddle's fascinating post on the manual is worth reading in full. But while he reads Apple's tactics as outlandish and creepy, if brilliant, I'd just call them brilliant. Of course the company wants employees to address tech problems without trash-talking Apple's own products. Of course it wants them to make customers feel valued while not forgeting that the ultimate goal is to part them from their money. These are things that every company wants, and they are skills that come instinctively to great salespeople.


But when you're a big company, it's almost impossible to impart these skills to every single employee. Most don't even try – they hand out a generic HR handbook that no one will read. Apple's manual, in contrast, reveals a firm so bent on maintaining customer loyalty that it will go to abnormal lengths to show its workers exactly how to behave in all situations.

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