Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Front-line People Reflect Their Managers

I worked with and addressed a group of retail managers this morning. The first message that I made abundantly clear was this:

"To become an outstanding retail manager, you need to first become an outstanding retail customer. Once you've experienced both good and bad service alike, only then can you differentiate. Only when you have set a standard of how you wish to be served can you demand of your staff any sort of standard. If you show apathy in being a customer, you will show apathy in how you train, apathy in how you hire, apathy in how you communicate and apathy in how you manage. The people on the front-line of service are a good reflection of their immediate supervisor's willingness to train and develop his or her people."

You know, come to think of it, this doesn't just apply to retail.


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