Who Benefits?
The editor of Medical Economics magazine gives the lowdown on tax-exempt medical savings accounts. Read more
The editor of Medical Economics magazine gives the lowdown on tax-exempt medical savings accounts. Read more
One of Inc.'s senior writers explains that employee leasing can be a dream come true or a real nightmare. Read more
Every large public company has a board of directors. The news is filled with stories about prominent people joiningboards, about boards kicking out presid... Read more
The obit of an advertising/PR firm that was started by three talented partners and why the firm failed. Read more
A psychologist debunks some of the myths surrounding wives who team up with their husbands to run family businesses. Read more
A look at how a well-known memorial-carving company went belly upafter new owners took over. Read more
An innovative training program in a California high school is churning out graduates who command high salaries. Read more
The creator of the comic strip Dilbertcomments on what's happening to trash cans in some big name-brandcompanies. Read more
A noted CEO tells readers there is only one way to know how morale is at your company: ask the people who work there. Read more
People enjoy being comfortable, and they notice when they're not. Here are two businesses that gain customer gratitude by providing creature comfo... Read more
Do your customers really need another box of chocolates or corporate knickknack during the holidays? For years, General Engineering Laboratories, a consul... Read more
Everyone knows the auto-repair business has an image problem. "Customer satisfaction is hard to achieve when the industry's revenues are based on large, u... Read more
When you have one location, quality control is simple. But as a company grows, it's hard to keep tabs on everything. The founders of the Ruby's chain of r... Read more
"Employees know what they need most to serve customers best," says Patty Remen, corporate relations manager for The Davis Companies. The $47-million staff... Read more
Finding a good interpreter is crucial to providing foreign customers with services such as equipment-orientation seminars. Marty McCann, an audio engineer... Read more
When you enter Direct Tire, based in the Boston area, you pass under a banner that reads, "We'll Fix It So It Brakes." That slogan, which owner Barry Stei... Read more
Are your customers frustrated when they can't reach you? Do they have to be transferred three times before reaching the right person? Here's how three dif... Read more
Peter Bull of Cherry Hill, N.J., didn't want his customers to feel the frustration he feels when talking with a customer-service rep who doesn't know him ... Read more
Diteck, a manufacturer of surge protectors, based in Largo, Fla., tracks the true cost of customer service independent of warranty costs or operating erro... Read more
Are you tired of tracking customer complaints with inefficient paper systems? So was AFFINA Corp., a Troy, Mich., supplier of market research and database... Read more
Working parents constantly juggle the demands of work and family life. Employees who spend work time worrying about their children or elderly relatives sp... Read more
"All you have to do is answer customer support phones for two hours to realize how stressful it is and how important those reps are to building customer l... Read more
When the office gets busy, there's a great temptation to dictate orders to the troops and skip explaining the whys of company policy. "But don't do it," u... Read more
When a customer working with several employees at a company gets two different answers to the question, "What's going on?"-- who's right? At Sealund Assoc... Read more
Tom Dickson, owner of the Lansing Lugnuts, a Class A minor-league baseball team, based in Lansing, Mich., likes to use customer complaints as a guide for ... Read more
Houston-based Pro-Mark, the world's largest manufacturer of drumsticks for musicians, drums up attention to clients' needs and positive feedback by
Floor employees closest to production are often best qualified to respond to customers' needs. Bob and Tom Jagemann, who run a family-owned tool-and-die s... Read more
Do you ask employees for their opinion on improving customer service? Adept Inc., an information-technology consulting firm, headquartered in Wellesley, M... Read more
Dickinson Theatres uses the motto "Ask, don't tell" to create a strong customer-service training orientation at its 39 locations. Jeff Garber, operations ... Read more
It's not unheard of to ask customers to pitch in when high costs are choking your business. Here's how two CEOs did it: Ask for help wi... Read more
Most people are aware of customer focus groups, in which customers are brought together and asked by a professional facilitator their opinions regarding a... Read more
The key to outstanding customer service is to find out what customers want and then give it to them. The best way to do that, contends Gary Nelson, is to ... Read more
We want our clients to understand the market and how to get ahead," says Victoria Manning, marketing analyst for John Hewitt and Associates (JHA), a risk ... Read more
HMC Group, an approximately $16-million architectural-design business in Ontario, Calif., holds dress rehearsals for sales presentations--with an audience... Read more
Successful firms learn from their mistakes if they're careful not to sweep errors under the rug. "Unfortunately, many customers mistakenly think they do u... Read more
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