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Take the Telephone Doctor Quiz
By Nancy Friedman
Jan/Feb 2005
You
may not have a lifeline, the chance to phone a friend, or even take two wrong
answers away, but you will enjoy taking this fun, simple quiz on customer
service. As we all know, customer
service is not rocket science and, of course, most of it is all common sense.
However, we all know too that common sense is not that common.
So have fun, enjoy the quiz, and good luck!
1. "How can I help you?" belongs:
A.
In the initial greeting.
B.
In the message taking scenario.
C.
Nowhere.
I'm not able to help anyone.
2. When I'm not able to help a
customer, I should:
A.
Tell them honestly, thank them for
their business, and hang up.
B.
Give whatever information I can,
right or wrong.
Wrong information is
better than no information.
C.
Get help immediately and advise the
customer help is on the way.
3. When I'm having a bad day, I
should:
A. Not bother coming into work.
B. Leave my troubles at the doorstep
like the song says.
C. Tell all my co-workers my troubles
to get it off my back.
4. Chewing gum at work is:
A. Okay.
B. A bad breath refresher.
C. Downright rude and obnoxious.
5. A mirror at my desk will:
A. Keep my ego in check.
B. Remind me to smile before I pick up
the phone.
C. Give me bad luck if it breaks.
6. Basic customer service skills are
important to me because:
A. Everyone needs a refresher.
B. I need a lot of help.
C. I never learned any.
7. Internal customer service means:
A. Be nice to others who come into my
office.
B. The customer is giving me a
stomachache.
C. Treating my co-workers as
customers.
8. When using voice mail and leaving a
message I should:
A. Leave my phone number twice and
slowly.
B. Leave a good clean joke to keep
them smiling.
C. Not leave a message, just call back
until I reach them.
9. Irate callers and clients are
important to our company because:
A. It's fun to handle those kinds of
calls.
B. At least we get a second chance to
make it right.
C. I finally get to yell back.
10. Asking questions of the customer
will:
A. Aggravate them.
B. Show I'm interested in helping.
C. Be considered being too nosy.
Quiz
Answers
1. Correct answer is B.
Anything after your name erases your name.
On initial greetings, your name is very important.
You have answered the phone to help them.
It's a given. Those words are
best used in a message-taking scenario.
2. Correct answer is C.
Be sure you let the caller know that help is on the way.
That's the most important part.
3. Correct answer is B.
We need to leave our troubles at the door.
Arguments with a spouse or a bad hair day is your problem.
The Telephone Doctor calls that "emotional leakage."
That's getting angry with Peter and taking it out on Paul, which is not
fair, not right, and no fun.
4. Correct answer is C.
No gum at work – ever. End
of subject. If you have bad breath,
use mouthwash.
5. Correct answer is B.
The Telephone Doctor's adage, "smile before
you pick up the phone," is the way to make every phone call a great one.
Remember, it's hard to be rude when you're smiling.
6. Correct answer is A. Everyone
can use a brush up course. There's
a great saying: "When you're through learning, you're through."
Never stop taking those little basic skill lessons you're offered.
Even if you do know it all, consider how good you'll feel about that!
7. Correct answer is C.
We need to treat our co-workers as well as we're going to treat our
clients and their callers. Remember,
we are customers to each other. We
sure don't need any internal conflicts between co-workers and departments.
8. Correct answer is A.
Voice mail was meant to take an
effective message. Give details and
speak conversationally so the person receiving the message will enjoy it.
Effective messages have concrete information – dates, times, names,
situations. Leave your phone number
– twice and slowly. Make voice
mail work for you, not against you.
9. Correct answer is B.
Getting a second chance is golden. And
irate callers, while certainly not pleasant, can be the challenge of the day.
They can be satisfied.
10. Correct answer is B.
Listening and questioning skills are critical to excellent customer
service.
Nancy Friedman is President of Telephone
Doctor Customer Service Training. She
can be reached at 314-291-1012 or by visiting www.telephonedoctor.com.
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