Many American firms have begun to master the skills of customer service
as the backbone of profitability, continued growth and most
certainly competitive advantage. These skills, when applied
to global trade, need to be adapted and enhanced to account for the
complexities and unique persona of international business. U.S. exporters
will grow and prosper in direct proportion to their quality of customer
service and this will hold true for small and large businesses alike.
One thing is certain: global trade is relationship-driven and quality
customer service dictates the quality of the relationship.
Gaining a Competitive Advantage
American exporters face stiff competition in global markets due to
many factors. These include proximity of competitive sourcing, pricing
pressures, political and cultural differences, currency fluctuations,
communication problems, infrastructure imbalances and trade finance
restrictions. American export firms that show creative talents, exhibit
patience and persistence, ally with key vendors and master the skills
of global trade and international customer service will be poised
to reap the rewards of competitive advantage. This does
not refer to simply providing a price that is competitive. Price sometimes
is the most critical issue, but often is just one of many factors
that goes into your foreign buyers purchasing decision. Other
factors such as convenience, servicing, the sales and marketing
factors tied into the transaction, the technical expertise of sales
or customer service personnel, or timely communication can
induce a buyer to pay a higher price.
As a general rule, if the pricing from one company to another is
within a reasonable range, the company with the larger offering of
services will win the sale, even if its price is higher.
Engaging in Quality Communication
A critical factor to making all these issues work for you is communication.
This can be broken down to three key disciplines: (1) communicating,
(2) responsiveness and (3) persistence.
Different cultures have different rules of communication. To successfully
engage in a business transaction across cultures, you must be able
to adapt to the norms of the market and not assume that all business
is conducted in a Western manner. Cultural business etiquette
will play an important role in how your prospective customers will
respond, how seriously they will take your communication and how successfully
you will avoid inadvertently insulting them. A few simple rules can
help:
Know something about your buyers country and language. While
most foreign buyers speak some English, commit yourself to knowing
the basic business language of your buyers country. You will
be respected for the effort and it will give you some insight into
negotiations and trade meetings. I maintain a little cheat sheet
next to my phone. It provides the basics such as hello,
good-bye, and thank you in a number of key
foreign languages. It goes a long way in developing a better relationship
with my overseas customers.
Avoid handwritten communications. All business communications, such
as faxes, should be typed. Foreign communication is difficult enough
without having to decipher poor handwriting. It also expresses your
professional commitment to doing the job correctly.
Responsiveness should be another important element of your customer
service effort. It will immediately provoke positive feelings
on the part of your foreign buyers. Responsiveness means following
up in a timely manner after business meetings, acknowledging all communications
(even if its just to say Im working on it)
and meeting all time frames promised. If you need more time, simply
communicate it and request an extension. A complaint I often hear
is how a poor response, or lack of one, can sour a deal.
Persistence (and patience) should be the third element of your firms
efforts. American culture expects a timely response and quick decisions.
Unfortunately, most of the world operates on a different time frame.
Many U.S. firms lose patience because of differences in time expectations
and walk away from lucrative opportunities. The success of overcoming
this obstacle is persistence.
For example, decisions in Japan are typically lengthy and made by
management groups, rather than by individuals. Being too diligent
and persistent will cause aggravation and, ultimately, the loss of
an opportunity. In the Middle East, persistence is considered a good
quality when it is combined with efforts to develop a personal relationship
with a buyer. In Latin America, too much follow-up too soon will elicit
a lack of response.
Building Personal Relationships
Persistence is well served when accompanied by efforts to develop
a personal relationship with your buyer. In many countries, developing
a close personal relationship ensures that both parties will become
long-term partners in trade.
If you have a product that is in high demand, with no competition,
then being an order taker is a viable method of operation. But most
of us deal with intense foreign competition and we must maximize our
opportunities. A key strategy is to develop personal relationships.
Foreign buyers often buy from the individual first and
the company second. A personal relationship will facilitate the negotiation
process and make the transaction easier to accomplish. Breaking
bread, an expression for having a business lunch or dinner,
is often a necessary part of developing sound global business and
personal relationships.
Most parties have to like one another before doing business. Breaking
the bread, pasta, sushi, knishes, or tacos and doing all the
other things necessary to facilitate the personal relationship you
and your potential customers is one of the key factors in developing
your export business.
Just as with any business, problems are likely to occur in international
trade: shipping the wrong product, logistics delays, government intervention
and cargo claims are all likely problems in normal business dealings.
The strength of the personal relationship you have cultivated will
carry you through such problems to an eventual favorable resolution.
Negotiating Problems with International Customers
Nothing frustrates a customer more than how they perceive they are
being treated when a problem occurs. Poor management of a problem
is probably the number one reason for a customer to go elsewhere.
Three key steps can help you cope with the inevitable problems that
will crop up in any business relationship:
1. Make Yourself Available. Be in the face of your customer. The
worst thing that you can do is hide or not face up to a problem. When
a problem does occur, whether it was under your control or not, be
sure to contact the client immediately and determine a feasible solution
that satisfies both parties.
2. Be a mitigator. In sales dialogue with potential global
customers, I always emphasize that we are the best mitigators
in the business. By this I mean that we will immediately initiate
steps to resolve a problem as soon as possible. This might mean calling
the consignee and advising of the revised ETA, rerouting freight to
catch the next flight, or finding a new carrier that can meet delivery
requirements.
3. Engage in follow-up communication. Following a disaster, make
a phone call or visit. Apologize again and again. Emphasize the positive.
Take this time to demonstrate how you worked to mitigate the problem
and outline steps that will be taken to ensure that it never happens
again.
The bottom line is that the business of exporting has certain inherent
problems associated with it. How we deal with these problems with
our customers will determine not only our ability to maintain one
client, but our profitability and opportunities for long-term success.
Thomas Cook is the author of The Ultimate Guide to Export Management.
published by Amacon Books in New York City. Mr. Cook can be reached
at (800) 524-2493. Mr. Cook is also a board member of the New York
District Export Council.
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