The objectives of this
initiative are to provide professional understanding, skill and experience in
the following areas:
o Effective conversation;
o Enhanced communication;
o How to create a
culture of service and excellence; and
o Effective methods
for calming an angry customer
Each objective was evaluated
by two means, one was the workshop evaluation and the other was a personal
action plan. Each participant works in a
dyad to put in place an immediate and personal action plan, called “shovel
ready ideas,” to be implemented as soon as they return to their office, based
on the workshop material. Each plan was evaluated by the workshop facilitators.
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CONTINUED FROM Project Description:
The Customer Service
committee was formed in response to a number of correspondences received by the
President from the college community, expressing unmet needs. On one such
letter – from a student, spoke of a great need for some adjustments in the way
we treat each other on the campus. That letter detailing lapses in civility and
in professionalism is what prompted the President to convene a Customer Service
Committee. Convened in January 2011 and chaired by the President, a 15-member committee
was formed and was well represented by units across the campus, including
faculty and staff; among them were Deans, Departmental Chairs, Administrators
in Admissions, the Registrar as well as Public Safety and Facilities
Management. The President being the
champion of this initiative was very clear on informing the committee of the
key stakeholders being the students and employees of the college.
After careful consideration,
research and exploration of the issues of the campus and initiatives across
academia, the Committee coined the project, the “Customer Service
Initiative-CSI”. This committee of dedicated change agents, met on a weekly
basis to develop a comprehensive initiative with the introduction of guiding
principles, a logo for branding and 7 core values that added to the concept of
a creating a Student-Centered College–titled “The Medgar Way.” These core
values were carefully defined by the committee and are currently framed and
displayed throughout the college. This tactic has encouraged faculty, staff and
students to consider their words and their meanings and to engage in vibrant
discussions. The committee engaged and made widespread use of our community
partners, each who had notable customer service initiatives. Those partners included: TD Bank, Motor
Vehicles, CUNY Kingsborough, Macy’s, CUNY Human Resources and Kings County
Hospital. The committee constructed and designed a Customer Service Manual that
identifies and works through all the major customer service and possible
civility issues at the college.
Utilizing a hired project manager, a pedagogical train-the-trainer
approach was utilized to work with the committee, produce a project timeline,
coordinate the Customer Service kickoff, peer to peer Customer Service
workshops, evaluation, monitoring, scheduling, updating of material for
successful continuance of the initiative and the creation of a website containing
information pertaining to the research and progress of the workshops.
The kick-off of the
initiative included leading industry representatives in Customer Service as
speakers, CUNY officials, along with promotional items to brand the initiative.
It was well attended by the college community, with close to 1,000 in
attendance. The kick-off qualified the
Customer Service Initiative and got immediate buy-in from employees of the
college.
Shortly
thereafter, we had a schedule for the 400-plus staff members of the college to
attend the College’s very own tailored Customer Service Workshop, in which
there were no more than two employees from the same department in one workshop.
We based the scheduling on the premise that if you know someone, you will be
less likely in the future to be uncivil in your interaction with them, in
addition to bridging a interdepartmental gap with employees of the college. The
beginning of the workshop is very heavily concentrated on engaging “ice-breakers.”
The first workshop was facilitated to the President’s Executive Cabinet. A top down
approach was important for the staff participants to know that their leaders
have also been trained on the same material.