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SimpleBiz360™ Podcast

PODCAST · business

SimpleBiz360™ Podcast

The SimpleBiz360™ Podcast focuses on inspiring continuous improvement. Our content features "One Minute One Question" shorts, interviews, and monologues designed to ignite contemplation, and action. 

  1. 422

    How often is your correspondence brief, clear and succinct? OMOQ #159

    The majority of our business correspondence is quickly embracing minimalistic content over comprehensiveness. In other words, we are leaning into communications that look like texts instead of letters. If this is you, are you confusing customers more than assisting them? Is your communication becoming too abbreviated and cryptic? Are you creating a cache of customer defections? If so, maybe it’s time to be brief, clear and succinct!Support the show

  2. 421

    Are you a goal post mover? OMOQ #158

    Changing customer expectations mid-transaction is usually a dangerous proposition. If you want to increase repeat and referral business, make sure that your deliverables meet the expectations that you advertise.Support the show

  3. 420

    Do you make things happen, watch what happen, or wondered what happened? OMOQ #157

    Most customers like vendors that employ sales and service personnel who make things happen. There is nothing more frustrating to customers than to watch their orders handled sluggishly. In addition, customers love vendors that can solve problems quickly, efficiently, creatively, and with tenacity. If your customer facing employees lack these inherent qualities, it’s probably time to move to Plan B which is a focus on hiring initiators who can lead.Support the show

  4. 419

    Are you in the habit of identifying problems along with solutions? OMOQ #156

    Business issues that have no immediate solutions are rather common. What’s uncommon are vendors that meet problems with multiple solutions that are ready to plug and play. No one likes to hear about problems unless they can also hear about remedies. We encourage you to find ways to be a remedy centric company who focuses on creative problem-solving.Support the show

  5. 418

    How much value does your company place on providing customers with voluntary updates? OMOQ #155

    Often times we overlook the significance of providing customers with voluntary updates. Information is KING. Information is powerful. The value of putting customers at ease is hard to quantify, because it is almost priceless! Demonstrating good order stewardship is proving that you care about the customer’s money. If an apple a day keeps the doctor away, then information given away, keeps your customers happy today.Support the show

  6. 417

    Is it finally time to stop telling customers what they want to hear? OMOQ #154

    “Tell them what they want to hear to shut them up!” “Keep the deal rolling…tell them what they want to hear.” “Don’t lose the deal…tell them whatever you want…just don’t lose the deal.” “I don’t care what you tell them…they better not cancel the deal.” Do these lines sound familiar? If so, take a look at how many customers got a line of BS from your company similar to the previous quotes. Customers are smart…much smarter than we care to admit. Today is a GREAT day to stop the BS, and start telling customers what they deserve to hear.Support the show

  7. 416

    Is authenticity part of your customer facing business model? OMOQ #153

    If you want to win over millennial and and Gen Z buyers, being authentic is essential for vendors. Be real. Be genuine. Be transparent Be honest. Be humble.Support the show

  8. 415

    Are your customer facing personnel made up of doers, talkers, feelers, or thinkers? OMOQ #152

    Customers want vendors who are primarily classified as doers. Customers want orders to flow seamlessly. They want action. They don’t want lip service, they don’t want clever schemes, they don’t want blame shifting… They just want vendors who do what they say they’re going to do. Ready. Set. Go.Support the show

  9. 414

    When was the last time you read a book about improving business skills? OMOQ #151

    Imagine reading one business skill-building book with a goal of obtaining three take-aways? Imagine doing this once a month for 12 months? With 36 new skills sets in one year, imagine the goals you could achieve, the raise you could get, or the new job you could obtain? Skills are transferrable from one job to the next. It all starts by cultivating a mindset to acquire new business skill sets! If you don’t know where to start, then we suggest you start With Dale Carnegie’s book entitled “How To Win Friends & Influence People.”Support the show

  10. 413

    How often do you talk to your customers? OMOQ #150

    Our fast-paced business world is moving further away from this principle. What would happen if we made a deliberate effort to talk with our customers? It's a simple question about a lost art! We encourage you to carve out some time to bond with your customers. They will love it, and you will pick up many, many ideas that can be used for continuous improvement! Support the show

  11. 412

    Is role playing a significant part of your customer service training? OMOQ #149

    Imagine a high school football team that never practices, and only shows up to the games. They would be a disaster. Now replace the football team with your customer service team. Why do we let customer service reps play the game, without practicing with them to ensure they are creating positive customer experience experiences? Role-playing is like practicing. It is essential for success. When will you start role-playing with your team?Support the show

  12. 411

    Are you managing customer experiences for your products and services? OMOQ #148

    Business is a two sided coin. One side is what you sell. The other side is how you sell it. Each side of that coin creates customer experiences. Is your company actively dissecting all of the experiences you create? Are you sometimes overlooking the “how you sell” side of your business?Support the show

  13. 410

    Do you identify and manage customer touch points? OMOQ #147

    Transactions have routine components that are common with most every sale. Many of these components involve interaction with the customer. These are commonly called touch points. Do you know how many touch points are in your routine selling process? Do you manage your team for successful outcome with each touch point? If your answer to both questions is no, maybe it’s time to explore improving your customer experience deliverables as a series isolated events, rather than an overall purchasing event?Support the show

  14. 409

    Does your company aim at exceeding customer expectations? OMOQ #146

    Customers can sense when companies are setting the service bar at a bare minimum. The companies that aim higher elevate the customer experience, and will benefit from an abundance of repeat and referral business. Avoid being “run of the mill” and aim at delivering exceptional customer service.Support the show

  15. 408

    Do you make changes to your company before, or after hearing customer complains? OMOQ #145

    One of the hallmarks of top tier companies is to anticipate the wants, and needs of customers. if your company routinely assesses the necessary components of customer success, you will always be one step ahead of creating bad experiences. Anticipating customer desires is a well-constructed pathway to ensuring favorable deliverables, and levels of customer satisfaction that exceed buyer expectations.Support the show

  16. 407

    What are 1% multipliers, and how do they work? OMOQ #144

     Sometimes a series of small changes help you deliver better customer satisfaction , rather than making wholesale, sweeping changes. When was the last time you sat down to identify 10 or 15 improvements you could make on your website? When was the last time you challenged the wording of your website? When’s the last time you tried to modify your procedures to make it easier for the customer? Imagine implementing 10 or 15, one-percent changes within 24 hours? These can become small force multipliers. Try it sometime. We are confident you will love the outcome.Support the show

  17. 406

    How can they use of courtesy communication improve the health of your business? OMOQ #143

    Voluntary communication from the vendor is a display of good stewardship in action. Customers want to know that their money is being spent wisely. Vendors demonstrate good stewardship by sending voluntary information designed to educate, inform and equip customers with helpful updates about their transaction. Do you want more repeat and referral business? Courtesy communication is a great tool to help you achieve that goal.Support the show

  18. 405

    Do you confirm verbal conversations with written confirmations? OMOQ #142

    After decades of consistently baking up conversations in writing, I let my guard down one time in December. The lack of written confirmation came back to cause me painful issues in February. Do you confirm the details of critical conversations in writing? If not, maybe it's time to start. A two-minute email could save you thousands of dollars!Support the show

  19. 404

    Do you ever pursue quiet time to reflect on business? OMOQ #141

    Turn the noise off, leave the electronics home, find a place to think… and continuous improvement ideas will pop up everywhere. You just need to quiet the noise, search your mind, reflect on possible improvements, and then write them down. It can be therapeutic and refreshing at the same time. Our minds are amazing creations, and we really see what they can produce when we search and listen. How about you? Do you ever search your mind in total quiet, and with a pen and paper nearby! Try it. The results will astonish you!Support the show

  20. 403

    Are you an effective room reader? OMOQ #140

    Football quarterbacks often call audibles because they read the playing field and see something that could damage their play calling. We are no different in business. Sometimes we need to call an audible in order to reshape our approach to something we see when we read the room. Do you read the room routinely? Do you sometimes reshape your approach after reading the room?Support the show

  21. 402

    Why do 91% of bad buying experiences result in the permanent loss of that customer? OMOQ #139

    The short answer is customer feelings. The day has come and gone, where product and services stand on their own merits. In today’s economy, businesses must be keenly aware of how they are making their customers feel. If you’re not managing this mindset, it’s time to giddy up, and address the 800 pound elephant in the room.Support the show

  22. 401

    Are you saving customers time, or are you wasting their time? OMOQ #138

    Time is money. Time is short. Time is a precious commodity to a business. What are you doing to reduce the time and toil customers have to spend doing business with you? Maybe it’s time to look for ways to save your customers more of their precious time?Support the show

  23. 400

    Is your company majoring in the minors? OMOQ #137

    Mature companies often find themselves saddled with internal squabbling about issues that are actually quite insignificant. If this is happening to your company, you are inadvertently taking your eye off the customer ball. Maybe it’s time to revisit your roots, and fall back in love with focusing on some of the major issues that can create good customer experiences.Support the show

  24. 399

    What are business black holes, and why do customers hate them? OMOQ #136

    Black holes are unanswered  communication. As time ticks by, the inquiring party becomes increasingly agitated because their inquiry has gone unacknowledged, and unanswered. Many deals have been lost, and many customers have defected because they were sent to a cyberspace blackhole by a vendor. It is time to Wakey-Wakey! Just answer your dang communication! Do a 180 degree turnaround today!Support the show

  25. 398

    Are you protecting your hard-earned profitability? OMOQ #135

    Margin erosion is a sneaky business killer that can unnecessarily send a company to the boneyard. Becoming a doctor of details is essential to protecting the precious pennies of profitability. If you are not willing to get into your company weeds, than brace yourself for a painful impact sooner than later? What say you? Are you putting your operational weeding gloves on to make sure you are retaining the profitability listed on your costing sheet?Support the show

  26. 397

    Are you consistently following up and following through? OMOQ #134

    After 35 years of tracking bad customer experiences, the lack of these two actions are the bedrock of buyer dissatisfaction. Period. End of Story. You want a more profitable bottom line? Do you want to stay in business for the long haul? Do you want customers to come back for more? Deliver on these two actions and most of your problems will be solved.Support the show

  27. 396

    How do you get the best return on continuous improvement investments? OMOQ #133

    The best return happens when companies aim their improvements at customers. Buyers have a keen awareness of which companies prioritize customer satisfaction over company profitability. The best companies know that happy customers will lead to healthy bottom lines. Where are your improvements aimed at?Support the show

  28. 395

    Are you humble enough to pursue continuous improvement? OMOQ #132

    The common thread of championship athletic teams is humility. At a certain point, once the collective team becomes humble, the real improvement and growth starts. Without that humility, the teams will never achieve the ultimate goal of a championship. It’s no different in business. If we want to succeed, and grow as businesses, the collective personnel must become humble enough to pursue improvement. Are you humble enough?Support the show

  29. 394

    Are you making decisions based on your perception, or the customer perception? OMOQ #131

    Sadly, customer perception molds customer reality. This reality may not be true, but to the customer, it is their reality. If companies want to create better customer experiences, it behooves the company to understand the various realities customers are seeing, feeling and receiving. If you have never jumped into the customer shoes to experience your product/service, now might be the perfect time to do so. While your at it, get behind their keyboard, wear their glasses, and sit in their chair. You will quickly learn that customers see our companies differently than we imagine.Support the show

  30. 393

    Are you substituting raw materials without getting customer approval? OMOQ #130

    Companies can lose BIG money when they deliver a product that looks, and feels inferior to the original sample. This happens all too often. Why? Companies want to pad profitability by using cheaper raw materials for the order fulfillment production. Is your company doing this? If so, maybe it’s time for an integrity-driven approach to filling customer orders? BTW…the example in this video created a $696,000 loss for the manufacturer!!!Support the show

  31. 392

    Do you carry the tools of your trade on a daily basis? OMOQ #129

    Many of us split our work week between our homes and company offices. Trade professionals transition from job to job in the same day. Each of us has common tools of our trade to work quickly and efficiently. However, many of us come to a work location without the necessary tools to perform our duties. Is this fair to our employers? Is it fair to customers? What about our associates and team members? Is it time to repack your backpack or car to make sure you have what you need to do your job?Support the show

  32. 391

    What’s in it for you? OMOQ - Invitation

    We invite you to follow us for two minutes per week. With a small weekly investment of 120 seconds, you will come away with two business questions designed to stimulate your thoughts about how to improve customer satisfaction. Follow. Like. Share.Support the show

  33. 390

    Do you read emails that come with attachments? OMOQ #128

    I could pay for a weekend at a ski resort If I had a dollar for every time a business associate printed an attachment, but ignored the email it came with! The accompanying emails often contain special instructions, requests, conditions, or previous agreements that act as addendums to the attachment. Are you training your associates to pay attention to both components of correspondence they receive?Support the show

  34. 389

    Does your ordering process cater to DIY buyers? OMOQ #127

    Many buyers prefer to order products and services independent of interacting with customer service personnel. Does your order entry process service “do it yourself” purchasing?Support the show

  35. 388

    Are your product catalogs informative or investigative? OMOQ #126

    Can your customers effectively order product from your catalog? Or, do your customers have to go on a hunt and peck internet search to gather the information they need to place an order, just because your catalog is not informative enough? If you are making customers go through more investigating to order, then it is time for the marketing department to wakey-wakey!Support the show

  36. 387

    Are you seeing what the customer is seeing? OMOQ #125

    Perception is a two-sided coin, but only one side truly matters! Does customer perception matter to your company? Some executives are blinded by self-pats on their backs while delivering mediocre service. Are your eyes opened to the cruddy service your customers are getting from you? Time to wakey-wakey!Support the show

  37. 386

    When was the last time you gave a customer something extra, without them asking for it? OMOQ #124

    Giving something extra is another way of expressing customer appreciation. L’agniappe is a Cajun expression that labels a mindset of giving something extra. To the Cajun culture, it is a conscious mindset that encourages usage. The trick is to provide this “extra” something without the recipient asking for it. What about you? How well do you deploy L’agniappe?Support the show

  38. 385

    Did you ever explore the power of writing handwritten notes? OMOQ #123

    The reality is that 80% of handwritten notes will get thrown away. The remaining 20% will quietly love them, save them, cherish them , or reciprocate by responding back. This applies to customers, spouses, kids, grandkids and friends. I would much rather put a smile on the 20% audience who appreciates receiving a heartfelt message. What about you? We invite you to go a little “old school” by exploring the magic of handwritten notes.Support the show

  39. 384

    Do you thank customers for their business? OMOQ #122

    Expressing appreciation is a dying principal in modern business. There is no way around this. Saying THANK YOU to customers is all but dead. An expression of appreciation on a paper, or text receipt is not making any customer feel warm and fuzzy. When are you going to pick up the phone, write a handwritten note, or send some chocolates to a customer?Support the show

  40. 383

    Do your customers receive answers to why they are experiencing transactional hiccups? OMOQ #121

    Why? Why? Why? In my 35 years of doing business, whenever there are problems, customers always want to know why. However, so many vendors get a failing grade when it comes to answering this simple question. If you want to make customers really happy, start telling them why there are issues with their orders…don’t just tell them there are issues. The main question on their mind is why. When will you start providing answers to the most prevalent question in business?Support the show

  41. 382

    Do you respond to customer inquiries when they need it, or when it is convenient for you? OMOQ #120

    Customers defect after they have endured enough doses of la-di-da service. Time is the currency of the Experience Economy. When customers sense the violation of their time, they usually say goodbye to that vendor. It is simply their way to punish bad service. Where is your company in this cause and effect equation? Is it time to revise your service mindset?Support the show

  42. 381

    Would you describe your customer service mindset as casual, or buttoned up? OMOQ #119

    What would customers say if you asked them what they thought of your customer service? Would they describe it as a lackadaisical approach to servicing orders, or a professional, well oiled machine? Talk to your customers. Be your customer. Find out what they think, and then throw away the Ladida approach and exchange it for a buttoned up approach. What say you?Support the show

  43. 380

    Do you write business correspondence in complete sentences? OMOQ #118

    Business is looking and feeling too casual these days. We operate at WARP speed, cutting corners, multitasking constantly. Then, amidst all this chaos, we partially answer questions with cryptic, text abbreviations. Our associates, or customers often ask us 2,3 or 4 questions at once, and then we go on to answer in unintelligible, short-hand quips that have tons of grey area, and, we only answer one of the multiple questions. This leads to misinterpretation, mistakes ensue, customers defect, and hard-earned profitability is swept away by the mistakes. Is this you? Is this your company? Let’s all wake up and start writing business correspondence in complete sentences. Stop the insanity! Today!  Support the show

  44. 379

    Do you invest time in learning about your employees? OMOQ #117

    What if we became Chief Encouraging Officers at the office? Most of us spend more time working than we do with our own families. As a result, the workplace often takes on the role of our second family. Knowing this, why don’t more leaders adopt a mindset of knowing employees by name, and knowing a little about their families? Maybe your employees are going through something, and encouragement could help their situation. We invite our audience to start knowing more about their employees. Try being a Chief Encouraging Officer!  Support the show

  45. 378

    How well do your inter company silos communicate with each other? OMOQ #116

    Intercompany divisions, often pursue goals, and objective specific to their operational structure. However, lost in the shuffle, is tying all the divisions together, so that everyone works in a harmonized effort to satisfy the customer. Are your internal divisions pursuing divisional success over total customer satisfaction? It’s a fair question that many companies need to answer. How about your company?Support the show

  46. 377

    Is your company managing first impressions? OMOQ #115

    The first 30 seconds we meet potential customers is all we have to make a good first impression. When we succeed, we launch the transaction process with the wind at our back. When we don’t succeed, we dig an unnecessary hole that can often be hard to climb out of. What is happening in your company with those first 30 seconds of customer interaction?Support the show

  47. 376

    Is your critical business thinking shallow or deep? OMOQ #114

    We often hit the business “Danger Zone” when we blindly copy and paste attractive-sounding business procedures, instead of critically thinking critically about our own business. Where are you in this click and drag world? Do you manage by shallow convenience, or by deep thought?Support the show

  48. 375

    How deep do you dive when managing business details? OMOQ #113

    The answers to improved profitability often hide deep below the way things look on the surface. Are you a detail-surfer, snorkeler or scuba diver? Maybe it’s time to do a deep dive to become more profitable.Support the show

  49. 374

    Are you humble enough to accept the necessity for change? OMOQ #112

    When it comes to faulty behavior, societal trends often suggest we adopt a blame-shifting mindset over a self-ownership model. However, in business it is quite the opposite because the orders usually stop flowing when a customer is dissatisfied. In business we have to buck the societal leanings, eat some humble pie, and then accept the fact that we need to improve to get the orders flowing again. This takes a mindset of humility. Are you will to eat some humble pie in order to serve your customer better?Support the show

  50. 373

    Is customer retention a mindset your company discusses in the boardroom? OMOQ #111

    How to keep customers is not a topic often discussed in business board rooms. We spend a lot of board room time talking about getting new customers. However, we need to spend as much time discovering more ways to increase customer satisfaction so we can retain the buyers we have. What about your company? Is it time for a new mindset?Support the show

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

The SimpleBiz360™ Podcast focuses on inspiring continuous improvement. Our content features "One Minute One Question" shorts, interviews, and monologues designed to ignite contemplation, and action.

HOSTED BY

Jeffrey Mason

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