Thursday, February 15, 2007

Chocolate Flowers
Going Beyond Customer Service

While taking a break from an intense day of antiquing, my friends and I ducked into a quaint coffee shop to rest our weary bones. We each decided to order chai lattes – a black spiced tea with a coat of foam on top. The barista asked if we would like cinnamon and chocolate in the tea and, before I could raise an objection (chocolate in tea?), one of my friends responded affirmatively for all of us.

A few moments later the lattes were ready and we were summoned to the counter to pick up our fancy drinks. As I approached the counter, I was delighted to see that on top of the white foam, the barista had drawn an outline of a beautiful flower in chocolate syrup. Imagine that! It was the first time I ever felt that four dollars was actually a bargain for a cup of tea!

That simple flower was something the three of us talked about while we drank our tea, after we left the coffee house, while we shopped, and then several times over the next few weeks. It cost the store practically nothing and took very little time, but it was a charming surprise. For such a small effort, those chocolate flowers made a great impact.

That experience got me thinking. What is my chocolate flower? What is it that I can give to my clients that is unexpected, that is more than I promise, that is a pleasant surprise?

After thinking about it for quite some time, I came upon the realization that there is not one perfect answer. Each of my clients may require a different chocolate flower. And each designer may have their own unique chocolate flowers. But to qualify as a chocolate flower, a product or service must have these two qualities:

  • It must be something the customer will like, and
  • It must be unexpected – more than promised


I don’t know where I first heard it said, but I always like to follow the rule:

“Under-promise and Over-deliver”

Your chocolate flower is part of the over-delivering.

As consumers and designers, we have the opportunity to interact with numerous businesses daily. Doesn’t it feel great when companies provide exceptional service – going above and beyond what was expected? Here are some ways that we receive chocolate flowers:

- We order several yards of fabric, and the mill sends us a memo sample for our client file.
- After buying new tires, the car comes back washed.
- While sitting in economy class on a plane, the flight attendant hands you a warm, moist towel.
- Get a manicure and pedicure, and receive the nail polish to take home for touch-ups.

Now let’s talk about some ways to serve chocolate flowers:

- When a customer orders draperies for their living room, surprise them with a matching throw pillow.
- At the completion of an installation, give your client a board with samples of all their fabrics and trims attached, so that they can bring it with them while shopping for coordinating items.
- If you are designing a treatment for a baby’s room, make a diaper bag out of the leftover fabric scraps.
- While you are up on the 16-foot ladder installing your treatment, dust the chandelier, clean the window, or replace a light bulb.

The Benefits of Chocolate

What are the potential benefits of serving chocolate flowers?

For about two cents and thirty seconds of time, that coffee shop received the benefit of some powerful word-of-mouth marketing with much more impact than any advertising could have accomplished. I told at least thirty people about the special service I received, and those people told others. I even heard that some friends were discussing it when I wasn’t around. Now I’m writing about it!

Can you imagine such publicity? Would that kind of chatter impact your business in a positive way? Could community gossip about your fabulous, unbelievable service add to your bottom line?

Of course, the answers to these questions are yes! As designers and business owners, it is up to us to create our own chocolate flowers – to find ways to go beyond what is expected of us. It can be the difference between a customer who is satisfied and one who is overwhelmed by the exemplary service and professionalism of her designer. Chocolate flowers are one of the most effective marketing tools at our disposal, and the best part about it is that it costs practically nothing to provide.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Nika, I LOVED reading this blog entry!!!! Thank you,thank you, thank you!!! Talk about "food for thought" (and chocolate, no less!)!!

I have a question- how do you feel about a referral reward program?? I am considering implementing a program where, if a new customer is referred by a client, when that customer hires and pays me, I will mail the referring client a $25 visa gift card as a token of my appreciation. what do you think??

Anonymous said...

Hi Gina,

Nice idea. Although I have found that money is not what motivates customers to give referrals. Most people are not going to refer you "because" they are getting some money, but it is a very nice way to thank them.

Even more effective is to keep reminding them that you are around (call them, send newsletters, post cards, etc.). That way, when anyone they know is in need of your services, they will immediately think of you!