Do Your Customers Look Forward to Seeing You?



great customer service

As another installment in my series of articles that point out examples of great customer service, I’d like to introduce you to Umpqua Bank. Umpqua Bank is committed to delivering an experience customized for each customer.

Umpqua’s executive vice president of “cultural enhancement” had a goal that everybody in every store should be able to do every task. Umpqua wanted a teller who can take a mortgage application and a loan officer who is pleased to help with a safety deposit box.

Beyond the banking experience, Umpqua believes in customizing experiences by community. The company leaves it to the managers in each community bank to customize their offerings based on their customers’ interests—from yoga classes in one “store” location (they don’t use the word “branch”) to movie nights or a knitting club in another. Each has its own fund to enable it to customize the experience based on the lives of the customers in its community.

Umpqua’s mission is to become a destination for customers. By offering a warm environment customized by community interests and a banking experience personalized to every customer who walks through their doors, it wants customers to think of the Umpqua Bank in their community as a gathering place.

As Umpqua changed its approach from a traditional “banking”-style service to a customized experience, employees had to learn to juggle many duties. It meant more work initially, but now they can’t imagine being limited to the individual tasks their jobs were defined as previously.

As Umpqua Bank has grown with staff increases, it has retained its focus on the customer and the values that built the bank. And the company has retained its employees. Umpqua’s voluntary employee turnover rate is just 8 percent, compared to the banking industry rate of about 40 percent.

In 2012, as a testament that this change in focus was not only good for customers but also great for employees, the company made, for the sixth year in a row, Fortune magazine’s list of the “100 Best Companies to Work For.”

Ask yourself:

  • Are your operating decisions based on executing tasks or delivering an experience that complements your customer’s day?
  • How good are the jugglers in your business?
  • Does your environment embrace and welcome customers?
  • How can you make a visit to your business a welcome oasis during your customer’s day?

Are you offering great customer service? Do do your customers look forward to seeing you?

3 Comments ▼

Jeanne Bliss Jeanne Bliss is the founder of CustomerBLISS; a consulting and coaching company helping corporations connect their efforts to yield improved customer growth. Her best-selling books are; Chief Customer Officer: Getting Past Lip Service to Passionate Action and I Love You More than My Dog: Five Decisions for Extreme Customer Loyalty in Good Times and Bad.

3 Reactions
  1. Rebecca Cortright

    Thank you Jeanne for this wonderful tips. Having a business means more than just selling your products, in today’s age, it’s all about selling, engaging your customers(social media), online review(managing reputation) and LISTENING. By focusing your energy to listening to your customers whether it’s negative or positive, your make them feel special. A simple eye contact and a smile can make a customer feel good, first impression last, so make the most out of it on every customers.

  2. Customer satisfaction plays a major role behind the success of a business. If you can make your customers happy then they will surely return to you and your business will keep growing. If your services are good and sophisticated then your customers will also recommend you to others and this way your business will gain trust and develop.

  3. Customer Service is the fuel of a business. If you provide quality service then your return will good. You return will be the same whatever you provide.





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