Title: EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION SKILLS
1EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION SKILLS
- Jayne Takahashi DVM, MBA
- Grande Prairie
- Oct 25, 2006
2How you do gain new clients?
- 57 referrals from other clients
- 27 yellow pages
- 8 colleagues
- 7 by location
- 1 by chance
3Effective communication
- Creates that trust
- Develop rapport and relationship
4Customer Service
- People business
- Goal to form some form of relationship between
two people who often dont know each other - Speech, body language and facial expressions
5Objectives
- Information
- Basic communication
- Verbal and non verbal language
- Hosting at your clinic
6Objectives
- Skills
- Selecting your words
- Active listening
- Managing challenging situations
7COMMUNICATION
- n. the act of sending or receiving information
- n. the act of sharing or exchanging information
8Conversations have become monologues in the
presence of a witness. (Wall Street Journal,
July 1997)
9SENDING INFORMATION
- VERBAL SIGNALS
- NON VERBAL SIGNALS
- Body language
- Actions
10How is your message received?
- 7 Verbal message
- 38 Tone of the voice
- 55 Non verbal message
11In a telephone conversation
- 86 Tone of voice
- 14 Verbal message
12VERBAL COMMUNICATION
- Speed of speech
- Words chosen
- MEDICALese
- Words that make a difference
- Trigger words
- Words that devaluate
13MEDICAL ESE
- Medical terms
- Technical explanations
- Misunderstood terms
14Trigger words to avoid
- I cant
- Ill try
- No
- Thats not my department
- If I can find out
- Youll have to
15Words that make a difference
- Cancel your appointment
- Waiting room
- Pay for your bill
- Remind you of your appointment
- Shot
16Words that devaluate
- Drop off
- Cage occupancy
- Animal
- Routine procedure
- Dental cleaning
- Staff members (Mark Opperman)
- It will only take a minute
- Thats nothing!
17Tone of Voice
- Inflection peaks and valleys of your speech
- Signals how interested you are in what your
client is saying
18VOICE
- Proper volume
- Warm tone
- Alert, not tired
- Well paced
- Avoid upper inflection at ends
19NON VERBAL SIGNALS
20People believe the non-verbal message more than
words spoken!
21YOUR BODY LANGUAGE
- Smile, open expression
- Eye contact
- Posture
- Gestures
- Personal space and comfort zone
- Overall appearance
22Body Language
- Your position relative to your client
- Eye to eye
- Body is angled to client
- Remove barriers between you and the client
23RECEIVING INFORMATION
- The body language of the other person
- Active listening skills
24BODY LANGUAGE OF THE OTHER PERSON
- Tapping fingers
- Shifting weight
- Frown
- Avoids eye contact
- Glazed over look
- Excited
- Engaged, nodding
- Looking at their watch
25ACTIVE LISTENING
- Shows respect
- Increases the sharing of information
- Shows trust
26BLOCKS TO EFFECTIVE LISTENING
- Thinking of what you are going to say while the
other person is speaking - Preoccupied with how much you disagree with the
speaker - Listen to what you want to hear
- You have come to a conclusion already
- Unfamiliar language or terminology
- Emotions
27LISTENING
- Speed of speaking
- 125 150 words per minute
- Speed of listening
- 750 1200 words per minute
- Often, not enough to keep us occupied
28A good listener will
- Let others finish without interruption
- Ask questions if they are confused
- Dont let their eyes wander around the room
- Remain open minded and ready to change their
opinion - Pay attention to non verbal signs
29Active listening encourages the person to talk by
asking questions
- Open ended questions
- How?
- Why?
- What?
- When?
- Who?
30ACTIVE LISTENING
- Listen to message
- Use a confirming statement
- Paraphrase or summarize the key facts
- Ask if your understanding is correct
- Clarify the message if necessary
31If you are determined to win the conversation,
you have stopped listening
32Communication BEFORE the clinic visit
- Telephone etiquette
- Using the pets name
- Clear, strong communication
33Telephone Etiquette
- Telephone is your first link to your client
- First impression of the clinic
- Often viewed as a nuisance vs. real work
- Every call is an opportunity to establish a long
standing relationship
34Telephone Etiquette
- 2 ring maximum
- If receptionist busy someone else needs to pick
up
35Telephone Etiquette
- Articulate and dont rush your greeting
- Smile through the call
- Use the other persons name
- Give the caller your complete attention
36Telephone Etiquette
- Is this an emergency or can you hold please?
- Wait for an answer before putting on hold
- Hold not greater than 30 sec
- Call back in given time
37Telephone etiquette
- Give as much service as possible
- Help the caller
- Prepare answers to common questions
38Electronic Etiquette
- Always include a subject heading
- Limit to 10 messages and never let fill up
- Keep it short no longer than 1 screen
- Check spelling, grammar, punctuation
- Avoid capitalization and emoticons
- Remember it is not private and can go to the
wrong recipient - Acknowledge receipt
39Communication DURING the clinic visit
- HOSTING AT YOUR PRACTICE
- Greeting both the pet owner and pet by name
- Make the pet owner and the pet feel welcome
- Individual attention
- Introductions
- Caution
- Automated system, standard forms
40Greeting
- Client name
- Pets name
- Make your client feel special
- Compliment the pet and the client
- Acknowledge something they are doing well
- Handshake
41CommunicationDURING the clinic visit
- Nurture the pet
- Explain the delay
- If gt20 minutes - try to contact before they
arrive - Clients with emergency
42The personal touch
- Thank clients
- When they do business with you
- When they offer feedback or complaints
- For their patience
- When they recommend your practice
43Farewell
- Sincere
- Lasting impression
- Good bye
- Thank the client for visiting
- Look forward to next time
44CommunicationAFTER the clinic visit
- Rechecks
- Confirm clients understanding
45CHALLENGING SITUATIONS
- Complaints
- Challenging people
46Managing Challenging Situations
- What do I say?
- How do I react?
- What are some techniques?
47Correcting a mistake
- Acknowledge the error
- Im sorry that happened. Let see what I can do
to correct the error - It is not necessary to defend yourself
- We have been very busy
- However, dont overlook the problem
48Complaints
- Opportunities
- Tell you rather than others
- Loyal clients
- Improve on clinic service
49Complaints
- Unhappy clients tell 6-9 people
- Happy clients will make recommendation to 3-4
people - Only 1/3 of lost clients return
- If the complaint is resolved, 9/10 clients will
return
50- Complaint management is NOT about making the
customer happy. It is about helping the client be
successful with the options now available
51TEXAS Method
- T thank your client
- EX explanation of the situation
- A acknowledgement or ask
- S solution
52Solution
- Try to meet the need
- If you cannot, explain your reason and let the
client know what you CAN do for them - At least two options but no greater than three
53What would you like me to do to help you?
54Challenging people
- Hostile clients
- Dissatisfied or disgruntled clients
- Talkers
- Distracted or distressed clients
55Difficult People
- Those whose BEHAVIOR causes us difficulty
- Behavior versus people
56CHALLENGING CLIENTS
- This typically represents only 5 of your
practice - But, they can cause 95 of the human-relations
problems
57Challenging people
- Learn how to manage YOUR side of the interaction
- Recognize you have little control over how others
behave towards you
58Hostile people
- Many reasons for their anger
- unexpected problems
- dissatisfaction with services
- emotional (fear, guilt, grief)
- time conflicts (expect results quickly)
- poor communication
- personality
59- Angry client - a need is not being met
- Deal with persons feelings by acknowledging them
- Then deal with the problem
60Blocks to meeting a need
- No one listens to me
- Something went wrong
- Im not getting your help
- The product is not working
61Hostile clients
- Be silent
- Dont interrupt them
- Dont argue
- Wait for them to take a breath
- Dont let them bait you
- Speak calmly
- Target move aside so their words miss you
62Managing another persons anger
- Keep your cool
- Conduct private discussion
- Let the person vent
- Use the persons name
- Show empathy
63Hostile client
- Try not to
- - say no
- - assign blame
- - make unrealistic promises
64Disgruntled Clients
- Most client dissatisfaction arises from issues
around - Fees
- Performance of unauthorized services
- Results of treatment or services
65Fees
- Prevention
- Clear communication
- Fee estimate form
- Client will be contacted if additional
non-emergency treatment required
66Fee Dispute
- Show clients the basis for charges
- Walk through the bill
- Visible demonstration
67Unauthorized services
- Prevention
- Will contact owner before additional procedures
unless it is an emergency - Written and verbal explanation
- Emphasize the importance of accurate contact
numbers
68Unauthorized procedure
- Stay true to your policy wherever possible
- Contact owner as soon as possible
- Explain why it was in the pets best interest to
proceed
69Results of treatment or services
- Prevention
- Confirmation of understanding
- Consider sensory language
- Visual aids
- Realistic outcomes
- Treatment authorization
70Results of treatment or services
- Timely recheck phone calls following clinic
consultation - Correct the problem, if at all possible
- Avoid defensive position by making excuses
71TALKERS
- Consistently long appointments
- Lingers after the appointment
- Shares too much personal information
- Calls the clinic frequently
72TALKERS
- Communicate that you need to go
- Body language
- Start to limit eye contact
- Briefly leave the area
- Words
- Ive enjoyed our conversation but I am getting
behind - Keep the conversation focused
73Distracted or distressed clients
- Not paying attention
- Not responding to questions
74Distracted or distressed client
- Intensify your connection
- Eye contact, talk more slowly, sit down with
client - Offer reassurance
- Offer smaller pieces of information
- Repeat the information
75Challenging peopleA Summary
- Concentrate on the problem versus your own
feelings - Take notes while the person talks
- Paraphrase to understand the problem
- Ask questions for additional information
76Challenging clientA Summary
- Provide concrete actions
- I understand that you feel strongly about this
matter and I have made notes of what you have
told me.
77Challenging ClientsA Summary
- Assume that the client means well
- Acknowledge that you cannot make anyone change
- Stay neutral
- Focus on understanding the problem
- Acknowledge the clients feelings
- Dr. Cecilia Soares
78Watch your body language
- Saying I am interested in helping client
- Appear to be uncaring, uninterested, annoyed,
dont believe the client
79- OTHER PEOPLE DONT
- DECIDE WHAT KIND OF DAY YOU HAVE
- YOU DO!