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7 Tips for Better Customer Service & Enhancing Your Image (227 words)Permission is granted to reproduce this article for your ezine or print newsletter with contact information intact. email mdvari@deg.com if you would like a jpeg and please send information on where this is published. Thanks!Image: 7 Tips for Better Customer Service by Marisa D'Vari 1. Customer service is a way of life, not just a "best practice." You can only compete on price, quality, and customer service. Take a long look at what you have to offer and choose accordingly. 2.Customers may not be with you as long as "you" will be with you. Plan now for tomorrow. Reach outside your customer base. Change is good for you and your customers. 3. Think outside the box We do lots of out of the box thinking -- but when we're not at our desk! Our creative minds work best when stimulated. The solution? Take a notebook everywhere you go and do your creative, out of the box thinking on the go! 4. Don't freak out with technology. Take it from a recovering technogeek - you do not need every program in the market. Software can easily become an addiction. (Just say no!) 5. Think image first, profit second. Represent value to your customers. When you provide value, profit follows. 6. Join your Chamber of Commerce. Volunteer and get involved. Form alliances. 7. Appreciate that you can't do it all. Never feel guilt. Be the best at what you can be and take pride in your accomplishments! ... and ... profit from FREE Media Promotion! Click here to learn more! *********************** D'Vari offers a wealth of articles on branding, marketing, and customer service on her site http://www.deg.com, in addition to dozens of free articles like these. Download her thirty page publicity report by sending an email to PublicityPlan@GetResponse.com. Visit her site at http://www.GetBookedNow.com and email her at mdvari@deg.com
Everyday is a Gift, Open and Enjoy It. There is a bottle of perfume sitting on my dresser that I was given when I was ten years old! As you can tell I have pack rat tendencies! For me that pattern started as a young child. I could never bear to throw things away. There was more to it than not wanting to throw things away. I loved the feeling I had when I would receive something new, and would not want to spoil it by using it unless. . .
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