This week my wife, Lynn, was in the hospital for elective
surgery to have a hip joint replaced. Although there is a lot of talk about
customer service over the air waves from many of the hospitals, our experience
did not show the level of customer service that is expected by the public
today. The average HVAC/plumbing contractor has much better customer service
than we found in our experience. I will not name the hospital but it is a major
player in the Metro Detroit area.
Let me give you a few examples of
our experience:
1.
Lynn would hit the call button to ask for
additional pain medications and she would often wait more than 40 minutes for
someone to respond. It would often be the nurse assistance who would then need
to find the nurse to administer the medication. This was not a life threating
situation but very disappointing.
2.
After surgery and being transferred to her room,
she had three separate people check her oxygen level within 15 minutes and none
of these people were aware that she had just had it done. The right not knowing
what the left was doing.
3.
I went down to the pharmacy to fill a take home prescription
for Lynn. They took it and told me they would call be on my cell in about a
half hour when it was ready since we were waiting for it to be discharged. Over
an hour later and no call, I went down to the pharmacy to check on the prescription.
It was ready but they never called as promised.
4.
A nurse assistant was walking the halls on the
floor of Lynn’s room, looking confused. They had changed his room assignments
but did not provide him with sufficient information to effectively do his job.
5.
Lynn often heard the staff speaking to each
other saying they didn’t know the answer because they were just getting on
shift or it was someone else’s responsibility.
6.
We finished all the discharge paperwork but getting
a wheelchair and staff member to handle it so Lynn could be wheeled to our waiting
car took over 90 minutes with several calls.
7.
During this wait, an orderly came to Lynn’s room
to take her to physical therapy. That department was not aware that she was
discharged and just awaiting a wheelchair to take her to the waiting car.
The preoperative situation and the surgical waiting area
were run effectively. None of the staff were rude or a problem throughout the hospital
stay. The level of treatment for the patient and the condition of the
facilities were not the issues. The problem seemed to be at the patient floor
level. Here the staff tried to meet the patient needs but management had not
provided the tools to do it with true customer care and service. The entire
floor where Lynn was recovering was orthopedic patients. The care needed for
the patients would be similar day in and day out. Some patients would require
more care, have special needs, or require additional time from the staff. Not a
whole lot different that our businesses. With effective training, proper
staffing, correct tools, and regular oversight this floor could provide much
better customer service. Records here are all computerized and information
should be available to every department and every care giver. Tasks are
repeated day in and day out. A routine and detailed operating formula could be
established, taught and monitored.
So let me ask you, “Is your customer saying the same thing
about your customer service?” There are only a dozen or so hospitals for us to
choose from in the Metro Detroit area, but there are literally hundreds of
service contractor options for a customer to choose from. If you are not
providing excellent customer service, your customer is going to find an
alternative contractor who will do that. “Are you asking your customer their thoughts
on the service you have provided to them? Are you changing what you do to
provide better service to you customer?”
Change or be left behind, you have to decide.
Dan has been in the service industry for nearly 50 years. He has operated a large plumbing, heating and air conditioning service company and for the past 12 years has helped small companies in the service business to
grow and prosper. Contact him at Dan@SayYesToSuccess.com.
Dan has been in the service industry for nearly 50 years. He has operated a large plumbing, heating and air conditioning service company and for the past 12 years has helped small companies in the service business to
grow and prosper. Contact him at Dan@SayYesToSuccess.com.