Almost all professional and financial “service” institutions (like banks, credit unions, law firms, financial advisors) say that what sets them apart is their customer service. Unfortunately, this mantra of great customer service has become tiresome and becoming increasingly harder to believe by the customer.
Perhaps banks and other financial institutions can learn a little something from Home Depot about what it takes to truly have superb customer service–and ensure all employees are involved. The nation’s largest home-improvement chain has taken customer service to a whole new level. All 300,000 employees recently took a mandatory crash course in helping customers. According to this Bloomberg story, the company also is on a two-year push to improve merchandising and modernize distribution–all to cultivate happier shoppers who buy more paint and power tools.
Home Depot also instituted a program called “Power Hours,” which freed workers from restocking shelves and other duties for four hours mid-day to focus on customers. And it’s apparently working! Early signs show that customers are happier and sales are up.
Anyone can say they have great customer service and therefore be content with what’s currently working–but today’s customer is the ultimate decider on what is great and what is so-so customer service…and they’re not shy about posting their complaints to the world about bad customer service.
For purposes of establishing good public relations, we recommend taking a closer look at an institution’s current customer service model to ensure it’s updated, respected and indeed GREAT.
Public relations and customer service run parallel lives. At LT Public Relations, we’re often tasked with working with the financial institution’s relationship managers or customer service representatives to ensure the “relations” with the “public” or customer are on par with what is said in the institution’s marketing.
If it’s not, there’s a big PR problem.





