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Your Customer’s Emotional Triggers

February 26, 2019

Back in 2015 , we created The 7 Service Triggers, a framework for understanding common triggers or hot buttons that elicit a negative emotional reaction in customers. The 7 Service Triggers explored the idea that patterns are evident in the things that set customers off and that these patterns hold true across a wide variety of customers and interactions.

Even within the 7 service triggers, certain triggers are more relevant to certain individuals than others. For example, a customer might be bothered more by being hassled than being ignored.

Triggers, by their very nature, are highly individualized.

Of course, the 7 Service Triggers do not begin to encapsulate the wide variety of different emotional triggers that customers have. Our emotions are much of what makes us who we are, and our emotional reactions are as diverse as we are.

Each customer has personal emotional triggers that are highly specific to them. They may be formed in childhood or later in life. These triggers may or may not be deeply-rooted in the person’s makeup. For example, someone’s emotional triggers may be informed by a broader influence, such as culture or life stage.

In this post, we are going to explore two common sources of emotional triggers and how we can use that knowledge to create better experiences and more successful service interactions.

(NOTE: For semantic convenience, we are going to use the term “emotional triggers” to refer to the individualized reaction points that are outside of The 7 Service Triggers. However, it should be clear that the 7 Service Triggers ARE emotional triggers and, as noted above, are also highly individualized.)

Emotional Triggers from Lifestyle

Different life phases and lifestyles impact what’s important to us. Are your priorities the same as when you were a teenager or in your Twenties? Have the things that bother you changed? Of course, because where we are in life impacts what is important to us and what we are less tolerant of.

An example I like to use in my customer service workshops is as follows: Take someone who is single and in his Twenties. Perhaps he is in his first job, has a roommate, and is always tight on cash. He might be set off by something like not getting a small refund or being able to use a coupon that expired.

In contrast, a successful business owner in her Forties with three kids, who travels out-of-town weekly, will likely care much less about small dollar issues and much more about having her time wasted.

For the first person money matters most, and for the second person time matters most.

Mix up the examples — a single dad in his Forties with three kids who is working two jobs to make ends meet — and you could end up with a customer for which both small dollar amounts and even brief impacts on his time are triggers.

Of course, we’re generalizing here, but you can see how lifestyle can impact what’s important to a customer and what might become an emotional trigger for a customer.

Emotional Triggers from Background

Some emotional triggers are incredibly personal; they run deep and are based on past experiences, whether they be from childhood, previous relationships, or professional history.

For example, depending on how someone was raised, they might see eye contact as aggressive; whereas another person might see a lack of eye contact as disrespectful.

Likewise, certain words or phrases can be triggers for people. Someone might be triggered by a rep’s failure to say “please” when requesting something, another by being told that something is their responsibility.

The important thing to remember is that everyone has a different background, and most people have developed hot buttons as a result. These triggers vary in character and intensity, and for those of us working with customers, they can be very challenging to identify before it is too late.

The question we all must ask in customer service is what can we do to discover and prevent these triggers, short of accidentally pulling them and dealing with the consequences?

Identifying and Avoiding Emotional Triggers

Below is an approach for identifying and avoiding customers’ emotional triggers.

  • Identify It. There are many ways to identify a customer’s emotional triggers. Two of the most common are the customer’s language and the customer’s previous reaction to a specific behavior.
    • Monitor Language. Customers frequently signal the hot buttons they have by how they communicate. Customers will often let you know what is important to them up front. They may say it outright, or you may be able to identify certain signals — like continuously returning to an issue, asking the same question repeatedly, or focusing obsessively on details — that tell you what’s important to the customer and where they might have a trigger.
    • Low-Level Triggering. Another way to identify these triggers is, unfortunately, to set them off, but hopefully in a context where it doesn’t cause too much damage. For example, let’s say a rep from your organization is (slightly) late for an appointment, and the customer gets disproportionately upset by the situation. The customer is not so upset that you can’t recover, but it is obviously an important issue for the customer. Awareness is key. While you didn’t want to set this trigger off, it happened, and now, you can use the information to avoid a similar situation in the future.
  • Document It. Once you’ve identified a customer’s personal trigger, take note of it and document it for yourself and for your team. Make sure your team is aware that this customer is very particular about this issue and use this information moving forward.
  • Avoid It. Knowing about a customer’s emotional trigger is only as useful as the care you take to avoid it, which means being careful and proactive regarding any situation that might involve the specific tigger. Continuing our previous example, if you were dispatching a repair person to the customer for who being late is a trigger, you could let the repair rep to know to be extra early for the appointment and to communicate well ahead of time if expecting to be delayed. You could also begin any service call conversation by offering the first appointment of the day to this customer.

Identifying a customer’s personal triggers and to avoiding them can be challenging, but like all aspects of prevention, it is effort well spent.

With proper awareness, documentation, and training, you can prevent more of your customer’s emotional triggers from being set off, thereby preventing negative emotions and paving the way for a more positive emotional experience.

3 thoughts on “Your Customer’s Emotional Triggers”

  1. Pingback: 371: Louis Carter, Emotional Connectedness

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