« 2009: The Year Of The Apple Confidence Rising »Tis The Season To Be Jolly!!!![]() In our last Thursday Night Insight of 2009, Nick Hague gives us all something to smile about. Is it me or is it that this time of year brings out the misery in people? As I tried to get on the tube on Monday, my joyful mood quickly turned for the worst after experiencing the cramped and squalid conditions of the London Underground with busy commuters pushing rudely past each other (I even caught an elbow in the rib cage from an elderly gentleman rushing for a train!). That night I visited the dentist. Not the perfect end to a day but, as it turned out, it was the most enjoyable part of my day. Firstly, I was greeted by the receptionist who welcomed me in with a smile. Now dentists aren’t my favorite place in the world but as I sat in the waiting room surrounded by gleaming white smiles peering back from the glossy brochures, I realized how nice it was to be on the receiving end of a smile (especially since I had seen such a lack of them down in London). It then took me back to when I lived in the US during my student years and I remembered how the staple of American humor about the UK is the population’s bad teeth (just look at Austin Powers the movie). I then thought back to the day I had just had and it got me thinking. I came to the conclusion that it isn’t the fact that the English have not learnt the art of smiling or are any ruder than our US cousins (have you ever visited New York?). It is just the fact that we are ashamed to smile because of our badly kept crowns and rotten teeth (I joke only slightly!). A smile not only changes your mood but it also makes you look more attractive and it is contagious. We humans are wired to respond like for like; just think about it, if you smile at somebody in the street, you are more than likely to receive a smile in return. Although I acknowledge that we can’t all be happy all of the time, we do need to make more of an effort, especially because smiling is a social thing. I recently read about a fascinating experiment carried out in a bowling alley that showed that when people get a strike they do not smile as they watch the ball take down the pins at the end of the alley. It is only when they turn to face their competitors that their faces break into a smile. We smile to communicate a message. In business, everything we do starts with the customer. Without customers, we would have no work, and with no sales, we would be bankrupt. What would a potential customer think if we solemnly entered a meeting and didn’t smile for the duration? I am pretty certain we wouldn’t win the job. Earlier this year, the Japanese government took things to the extreme by testing railway workers’ curvaceousness of smiles at 15 railway stations in Tokyo. Workers had their smiles computer tested and those that didn’t meet the perfect smile criteria were directed on how to improve their smile. Service with a smile is often used within the consumer industry but is that because the market is directly interacting, face to face with the customer and not down a protracted value chain as in business to business markets? Now I am not saying that we need to go as far as the Japanese government but what I am stressing is the importance of customer satisfaction tracking in b2b markets. As we close the door on 2009 and open a fresh one to 2010, ask yourself one question – What are your customers feeling right now? Are they smiling? What if they aren’t? What can you or your company do to put the smile back on their faces? For our final Thursday Night Insight of 2009 I want to leave our readers with something. We have all heard the adage ‘It takes a greater number of facial muscles to produce a frown than it does to generate a smile’. Now I am not sure if this is true but here are 10 things that we should all bear in mind as we move into 2010 (especially if you are travelling on the London Underground!):
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