Last week, I was shopping at my local supermarket around 9pm and one of the items I needed was canned sweet potatoes so my wife could make her fantastic muffins. I looked in the canned fruit section, the baking section and the canned vegetable section — no dice. I went up to 2 cashiers and 2 baggers who were not helping anybody at the time since the store was practically deserted. I asked where were the canned sweet potatoes. I got 2 different answers, so I went back checked both locations and still no luck. As I was checking out, I remember that I still needed the sweet potatoes. I told the the cashier that I still could not find the sweet potatoes. After trying to tell me again where it was, I told them to send someone to find it and to bring it back. I compare this experience to one I get at Trader Joe’s, where I am usually led right to the item no matter what the employee is doing at the time.
Bruce Tempkin of Forrrester, talks about leadership this week on his fantastic blog, Customer Experience Matters, after reading a post on the HBS discussion board talking about the CEO of UK retail giant Testco, Sir Terry Leahy, who said recently in a speech, “Tesco doesn’t want one leader. We want thousands of leaders who take initiative to execute the strategy.” The company has 400,000 employees so it can be difficult to keep everyone moving in the same direction. Early on they came up with a company motto,”Every Little Helps.” I agree with Bruce that the motto is incredibly powerful and simple at the same time.
Zappo’s is a online shoe retailer that delivers excellent customer service. It has a company policy, which offers employees a $1,000 bonus to quit after their first week, believing quite correctly that if you don’t feel like leading the way with superior service, they want to encourage you to leave rather than contaminate the other employees.
As I deal with companies, I see employees go out on their own to deliver good service and many times that action is neither observed or rewarded by anyone else in the company. A smile. A thank you. Calling me back. Just actually listening to my question. Unfortunately, all too often a company with a lack of leadership will suck the passion right out of their employees with conflicting, unclear or strict company mandates. These different company environments lead me to ask this question. How difficult is it to make sure there are individuals leading everyone in the right direction and empowering your employees to to make sure that everyone is a leader in their own right. How about your company? Is it run by a bunch of leaders or is everyone moving in different directions or worse no direction at all?
Sep 18, 2008 at 11:14 am
The Zappo article you referenced quickly made it to my inbox from a colleague I’ve worked with on brand touchpoint activation initiatives. Employees as brand ambassadors is not a new concept, yet it seems most companies fail to consider the brand education of their live channels past anything more than a 1-2 hour training.
Of course people like to point to companies like Southwest and Disney as organizations that exemplify brand activation through their employees. But, as I think Zappo demonstrates, a top-down leadership approach to “living the brand” is not nearly as impactful as a grassroots effort whereby each employee is an independent brand agent working under collective brand pillars.
With all that said, one has to notice you felt compelled to write about this experience you had at your local grocery store. We’ve all had them…a rude employee, an aloof store manager, or a downright annoying salesperson. As marketers, we have to be real with ourselves and realize that interaction has more to do with a consumer’s brand perception than any website, creative, or campaign.