One of my worst mental habits is over-generalizing; I admit it. When Im trying to drum up business, and I get rejection after rejection, Im tempted to tell myself, Gee, theyre just not buying out there, today! Well, thats just plain foolish, isnt it? They or at least some of them are certainly buying something. I just havent found them yet, right? Customer service reps also over-generalize, especially when they encounter a form of rejection specific to their work. Often its called conflict or anger or simply gathered under the heading of dealing with difficult customers. Conversations get ragged and emotions fray, and peoples voices start to elevate while faces flush. Its not a happy time, to be sure. But really, how often does this kind of bad call happen? Ive done some surveys along this line and I can tell you this: Most people over-generalize when it comes to quantifying the proportion of their conversations that are negative or filled with anger or conflict. When you ask reps, youll frequently hear numbers up to 80%. When the same reps calls are monitored for customer negativity, anger, or conflict, the truer proportion is closer to 5%. Why the gap? A few reasons come to mind: (1) CSRs and their supervisors crave respect, and one way to elicit it is to be seen as heroically handling one tough situation after the next. (2) It seems a part of human nature, and possibly a deeply rooted survival mechanism, to overvalue negative feedback from our environments. That which is wrong and threatening gets our attention more than whats normal or even comfortable. (3) Memories are selective. I can look back on certain seminars that Ive taught where 99% of attendees raved about them, but 1% griped in their evaluations. Guess which ones I remember from those programs, weeks and months later? (4) Conflict is juicy, interesting, and provocative. Secretly, some people like it because it keeps them awake and on their toes, adding drama to an otherwise routine task. For this reason, some reps unconsciously provoke negative response from customers. (If you think this is crazy, like firefighters setting blazes for the thrill of watching or snuffing them, see the fine movie: Backdraft.) Of course, there is a very practical hazard in over-generalizing about the amount of flak were facing. Were more likely to develop the bad habit of ducking to avoid it, even when it isnt there. Well approach calls sounding defensive, ourselves, expecting fights where they wouldnt occur, otherwise. And can you guess what happens when we sound defensive, especially at the beginning of conversations? Customers ECHO it back to us, and we think they started it. So, if youre a manager, do your own audit of transactions and note for yourself how the perception of rampant conflict is exaggerated. Then share this insight with reps. This might reduce their stress and defensiveness, and once this happens, your customers may follow suit. |