Are You Doing a Good Job?
I'll bet that you are really good at what you do. You are
conscientious, creative, and hard working. You would never
short-change your customers or give them less than 110 per cent.
Right? RIGHT!
But do your customers know that? Do they know that you are on
schedule, that you gave them something extra, that you did
exactly what they wanted?
"Okay, Dave, what got you started on this one?" you're probably
asking.
We have some friends that hired a pet-sitter to take care of
their two dogs and two cats while they were on vacation. When
they returned, they found no evidence that their animals had
been cared for as instructed. Medications looked as if they
hadn't been touched. The supply of treats looked virtually the
same as it had when they left. True, the animals were healthy
and that's the most important thing; to paraphrase Roseanne,
"The animals were alive [when my friends got home], so the pet
sitters did their job!"
>From a business point of view, though, the pet sitters didn't
do so well. The evidence suggests that they did a 'poor' job. Or
was it just a case that there was no evidence that they did a
'good' job?
Did they give the medications or didn't they? It looked like
they didn't when, in fact, they did, and provided an extra
service by picking up more. Did they give the treats as
requested or didn't they? It looked like they didn't when, in
fact, they did and provided an extra service by going to the
store to buy more.
The word is "perception". You may be doing a great service for
your customers, but leaving them with a different perception of
what you've done.
I learned this lesson the hard way. As a programmer/consultant
at a large medical facility I was given an important program to
write. It was a critical component of a critical system that was
supposed to be operational by a certain date. I worked on it
mostly from home. My client didn't see me very often, and his
perception was that I was goofing off; procrastinating until the
last moment. As a result, his anxiety level was high, to put it
mildly. In fact, I was doing a GREAT job for him, putting in
extra time and even a few extra features.
My bad. I should have made a point of letting him know what I
was doing so that he would feel comfortable in knowing what was
going on. I could have done this in a number of ways both subtle
and not-so-subtle. Subtle: "While I was working on this at home
last night, I came up with a few questions." Not-so-subtle: "I
know you haven't seen too much of me lately, but that's because
I've been working on this project at home. I didn't want you to
think I was putting it off".
The point is this: if you're doing a good job for your
customers, make sure they know it!