Book Reviews Information

Hug Your Customers - AchieveMax® Top Ten Book Review


Don't panic. Jack Mitchell, the author of Hug Your Customers: The Proven Way to Personalize Sales and Achieve Astounding Results, isn't suggesting that you take his title literally. Hugging your customers, he says, has nothing to do with being touchy-feely around them and everything to do with offering them over-the-top service. His advice is hardly groundbreaking. For instance, what rookie employee has not heard the old adages such as "know your customer, think outside the box, have a 'no problem' attitude"? While we've all heard this obvious, age-old advice repeatedly, how many of us can honestly say we've seen it practiced with any level of success where we shop, eat, travel, etc.? That's the point of this book. Everyone knows what should be done to create repeat customers ... very few people do it!

Chances are pretty good that you've never heard of this author or his business establishment. Jack Mitchell is co-owner and CEO of Mitchells/Richards, two independent clothing stores in southern Connecticut and New York's Westchester County (two of Manhattan's most affluent suburbs). This upper-end clothing retailer dresses many Fortune 500 executives from Chase, GE, IBM, Merrill Lynch and Pepsi to name a few. Today, Mitchells/Richards sells $65 million in apparel annually. However, the store began as a modest family business, started by Jack's dad in 1958. Don't make the mistake of tuning out at this point because you don't work in the clothing business. What Jack learned from his father decades ago can be applied to any and all customer-centric businesses that appreciate the importance of knowing that having satisfied customers no longer insures success-you must have extremely satisfied customers who want to return time and time again and encourage others to do the same!

Mitchell credits his family store's success to making the store a home, where customers feel welcome. Mitchell says his parents: "... understood that customers wanted five things more than they wanted a great location or enormous inventory:

  • A friendly greeting
  • Personal interest
  • A business that makes them feel special
  • A 'no problem' attitude
  • Forward thinking
  • For Mitchell, that means literally offering a customer the coat off your back, if that's the only one left in the store in the customer's size and preferred style and color. It means going to customers' homes to tie their bow ties for big events. It means serving coffee and bagels in the store and giving away hot dogs in the parking lot on summer Saturdays. Some might view this as fawning, but for Mitchell, it's the best way to keep customers coming back. You, of course, will have to determine what it takes to "HUG" a customer within your environment. This would make an excellent exercise for your staff. Once the crucial determination is crystallized, discuss expectations, training, and follow up to insure success.

    Mitchell writes: "When you have strong relationships, customers will do more of their buying from you. They'll refer other customers. They'll communicate with you better and tell you what they like and what they don't like, in turn making your business more efficient and effective."

    The author points out that hugging is difficult to quantify, and many companies ignore customer satisfaction and customer profiling altogether. While inventory is recorded on the balance sheet, Mitchell tells us that a company's greatest asset-repeat customers-doesn't appear on any financial statements.

    Further, while companies invest significant amounts in computer systems, they rarely develop computer systems that support a hugging culture.

    Mitchell writes: "What's amazing is that although personal relationships are absolutely crucial to any company's success, they are rarely tracked by any system. Hotels don't know who likes queen-sized beds and who wants extra pillows. Airlines don't know who prefers aisle seats and who prefers the window." Can something similar be said about you, your business and your customers? If so, take action to correct this situation.

    Mitchell is a big fan of profiling customers to provide more personal service. He likes his sales associates to know which customers like M&M's and what nicknames they prefer.

    Knowing personal information about each customer is nearly impossible without a database to support this information. However, it doesn't stop there. I know of many companies who boast a tremendous database and yet do nothing with it. Like any other customer service strategy, knowing it is not enough. You have to use it. In today's unbelievably competitive marketplace, there are few who "use it." So-o-o-o-o, define your "HUG," make it an expectation, train your staff to "HUG," practice it, and then, most importantly, "HUG!"

    More than 100 business book reviews written by Harry K. Jones are available at http://www.AchieveMax.com/books/.

    Reprint Information

    Your organization may reprint this article for your newsletter, online publication, or mailing list. We ask that you print the:

    • article in its entirety;
    • byline of the writer;
    • information about the writer, which is available at the end of each article; and
    • contact information, including our toll-free phone number in the U.S. (800-886-2MAX) and link to our website - www.AchieveMax.com.

    We would appreciate a tear sheet or electronic copy of the articles you reprint.

    Harry K. Jones is a professional speaker and consultant for AchieveMax®, Inc., a firm specializing in custom-designed keynote presentations, seminars, and consulting services. Harry has made presentations ranging from leadership to employee retention and time management to stress management for a number of industries, including education, financial, government, healthcare, hospitality, and manufacturing. He can be reached at 800-886-2MAX or by visiting http://www.AchieveMax.com.


    MORE RESOURCES:

    The Main Event Comic Book Reviews 10.10.08
    411mania.com, TX - 13 hours ago
    General: Gail Simone's ongoing series following the moral ambiguity of DCU's mercenaries continues as the Secret Six plunge headlong into a scheme that sees ...


    Book Reviews: Small Town, Big Miracle
    Dallas Baptist Standard, TX - 23 hours ago
    By Staff, Baptist Standard Don’t read WC Martin’s Small Town, Big Miracle except with a box of tissues nearby. Even then, don’t pick up this book unless ...


    Country Life

    Latest book reviews
    Country Life, UK - Oct 10, 2008
    The opening chapter finds Wilberforce (he is only known by his surname) getting shockingly drunk in a restaurant, having ordered himself two £3000 bottles ...


    Book Reviews - October 9, 2008
    Tonight, South Africa - Oct 8, 2008
    By Reviews by Arja Salafranca There is talk that the long-neglected short story is enjoying something of a renaissance locally, and the publication of four ...


    Book reviews: "The General of the Dead Army" and "Like Eating a Stone"
    International Herald Tribune, France - Oct 6, 2008
    The General of the Dead Army By Ismail Kadare. Translated by Derek Coltman from Jusuf Vrioni's French version. 264 pages. Arcade. $24.95. ...


    Book reviews: 'Soccer Dad;' 'Liberty'
    Detroit Free Press, United States - Oct 5, 2008
    In the first chapter of this loving remembrance of his son's final year of playing soccer on a top-ranked high school team, WD Wetherell says he assumes ...


    Shiller, Buffett Stand at Crossroads: Most-Read Book Reviews
    Bloomberg - Oct 4, 2008
    ... and Alice Schroeder's ``The Snowball,'' an authorized biography of Warren Buffett, led the list of the most-read Bloomberg book reviews in September. 1. ...


    Review: Perfumes by Luca Turin and Tania Sanchez
    Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - 17 hours ago
    Two years ago, Luca Turin's book The Secret of Scent showed him to be a man with a passionate nose, a chemist's precision and a scientist's enthusiasm for ...


    Book Reviews - Two Books, One Message
    Asia Sentinel, Hong Kong - Oct 7, 2008
    I’ve recently read two China-related books which, while different in style and narrative substance, share a common underlying message. ...


    코리아타임즈

    Book Reviews Loss of Native Languages
    코리아타임즈, South Korea - Oct 3, 2008
    By Chung Ah-young Just imagine your mother tongue disappearing in the near future, leaving only a few dominant languages in the world. ...

    Book-Reviews - Google News

    home | site map
    © 2006