YOUR BUSINESS AUTHORITY
Springfield, MO
When Amy, a client’s granddaughter, turned 16, she got her first paying job as a hostess in an area restaurant. Barely 2 minutes into assuming her new hostess job, an irate customer confronted her.
The customer’s face was cranky and fuming as she approached the stand; her eyebrows arched, her eyes locked in, ready for a battle. “You obviously don’t know what you’re doing, and I demand that you get your manager right now!” she yelled at Amy.
Indeed, the restaurant inconvenienced the customer 30 minutes earlier when another employee took her to-go order but left out an item. Amy got her manager involved, and he calmed the woman and resolved her issue.
After several more unhappy customers, Amy remarked, “I had no idea there are so many rude people in the world.” Sadly, rude behavior may be growing. An online video search for “angry customers throwing things at employees” produces numerous examples of the problem’s extent today.
Recently, my wife and I placed an order for a grocery pick-up service while on vacation. The young lady who dealt with us was excellent, and I asked how I could leave her a tip. She thanked me for being thoughtful and then told me what had happened just hours earlier when a customer came to get his order.
The young lady had explained to the customer that they were shorthanded and swamped and asked for patience and understanding. But after waiting for several minutes, the customer became furious. As the young lady unloaded his items, he yelled at her and spewed profanities, calling her “a stupid idiot” and saying, “you’ll never amount to anything.” Then he threw 23 cents into the young lady’s face, yelling as he drove away: “You’re nothing but a loser in a loser job!”
Undoubtedly, poor service or problematic products will bring out the worst in our customers, but nothing justifies caustic behavior like that.
There are several possible reasons why rude customer behavior occurs today. Here are six.
No employee deserves toxic behavior from a customer, even if the individual has a lousy attitude or makes a mistake. We can find ways to be kind even when we’re displeased.
Consultant, professional speaker and author Mark Holmes is president of Springfield-based Consultant Board Inc. and MarkHolmesGroup.com. He can be reached at mark@markholmesgroup.com.
Heirloom Candle Bar moved; art supply thrift store Arrow Creative Reuse opened; and Rockford, Illinois-based Beef-A-Roo debuted in Springfield.