Catering To Customers - In Whatever Language They Speak - Has Never Been More Important

Catering To Customers – In Whatever Language They Speak – Has Never Been More Important

I'm used to seeing signs in Chinese characters in many places I visit, however, Las Vegas hasn’t typically been counted among them.

Each year, I travel to Asia for auto parts trade shows and visits to various manufacturers. Because of this, I’ve brushed up on my Japanese and I’m trying my hand at Mandarin.

I’m used to seeing signs in Chinese characters in many places I visit, however, Las Vegas hasn’t typically been counted among them. I’d been reading about a particular outlet mall close to the Strip and during the recent AAPEX show, I took the opportunity to make a visit to see what this place is all about.

What I saw and heard made me do a double-take: The announcements blaring from speakers, for the most part, are in Chinese. Signs are in Chinese. Probably 70 percent of the clientele are Chinese. Nearly every store had Mandarin-speaking employees.

This mall has taken the idea of catering to its customers seriously. Need a credit card to buy all the stuff you want? Those signs are in Chinese, too.

Need some assistance emigrating to the U.S.? Again, Chinese characters on an attorney’s advertisement explain who to call in the Las Vegas area. Nearly every store’s sign was translated into Chinese.

Chinese shoppers are discriminating, too. They know what they want. They come in, buy it and move on. Many times, this is because they’re part of a tour group and have a limited amount of time to buy what they want.

Why are malls catering to Chinese tourists? Because they spend money, lots of it, by some estimates, up to 50 percent or more than other shoppers. In major cities around the U.S., outlet malls are catering to Chinese shoppers in many of the same ways.
Los Angeles Magazine recently recounted just how serious some shoppers are: A guest at the Four Seasons hotel there spent a week at the hotel for the sole purpose of buying a particular handbag. She couldn’t get it, and plans to return for an entire month to wait for one, the magazine reported.

One luggage store manager I talked to said Chinese shoppers often come into her store with specific bag measurements in mind. They want a bag that’s X number of inches in measurement, she said, and while brand is important, what’s more important is that the bag is large enough to pack everything they’ve bought that day and return home to China.

Catering to customers has never been more important. The choices for buyers in all industries have never been more plentiful. Knowing what your customers want and being able to communicate with them in their own language — whatever that language may be — is paramount.

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Customer service should be your number one priority, and it all starts with the greeting.

This is always an important topic to discuss, because I consider excellent customer service one of the most important tools you can have to earn trust, respect and repeat business from the customers that come through your door. Whether that customer is do-it-yourselfer from across town or the professional repair shop across the street, your business depends on a solid relationship.It’s a subject that I am passionate about, and it’s one that many people are losing touch with. Whether you are communicating to someone in person, on the phone or using some type of social media, good customer service and bad can both exist. You can’t afford the latter, so this is the first in a series of topics which can and should be shared from the front of the shop to the back. No matter which role you hold, you represent the shop and yourself. Customer service should be your number one priority.First on the list is the greeting. From the second a customer walks in the door, they need to know you appreciate them coming in and how important they are to your business. First impressions are everything and here’s the correct way to do it each and every time: look them directly in the eye, smile and say hello!Of course, you can say “Good morning” or “Welcome to Joe’s Autocare,” but it should be a formal greeting and the most important thing is that you have smiled, looked them in the eye and recognized that they have walked through the door.You should always retain a formal greeting until you are on a first-name basis with a customer. Only once you have established that level of relationship is it OK to use the less formal greeting of “Hi,” followed by the person’s name.This greeting does more than just indicate respect and appreciation for someone walking through the door. Most likely there are customers both new and old who are in earshot of your conversation. For newer customers, this continues to build rapport and reinforce their positive view of your shop; they see that you demonstrate respect and treat everyone in the same manner. For repeat customers, even ones that have been coming for years, the greeting is important because the way you treat them is the reason they continue to come.And when a long-time customer comes in and you greet them with “Hi [First Name],” this indicates your appreciation for them and that you’re glad to see them as a person, more than just a customer. New customers that witness this will see that your repeat customers are comfortable enough to be on a first-name basis, another indication of the trust they have in you.

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