Foodservice
Solutions® Grocerant Guru® Steven Johnson recently stated that
“restaurants that automate the majority of the restaurant operation risk losing
the emotional connection with their customers.
Technology is fabulous but the emotional connection with the consumer
still rules the day.”
Success
does leave clues and during transformational times foodservice companies require
focus and experience with a qualitative edge.
That edge requires the right balance of intellectual quotient (data IQ)
and emotional quotient (EQ) which combined with vast and broad first hand
industry knowledge will contribute greatly to you and your organizations
success. Like a teeter totter to much of one and you will lose equilibrium.
Robert
Huebner, president of 200Mark Consulting, explained why emotional
intelligence is a profitable tool and important skill set. “Emotional intelligence involves being able
to step back in moments of heightened emotions and regulate ones response to
the situation in order to improve the outcome of the situation.”
Huebner
sited an example “Road range is one example of a low emotional intelligence
(EQ) reaction. Today, some eight in 10 drivers are said to have road rage and
these people are coming off the road into your stores. How you and your
employees interface with these customers can have a huge impact on outcome and
the overall experience of customers, which is key to your bottom line.
Self-serve
kiosk, iPad ordering, mobile phone ordering all work well except when they
don’t. The data or IQ will explain how
fast, how efficient, and customer adoption should rule the day. That data however is a bit like category
management it misses the complexity of what does not happen on the devise. That according to our own Grocerant Guru®
should be cause for pause.
Remember
category managers were the primary cause of grocery store market share
capitulation over the past 20 years. Why
simple they only measure and document what they sell not what is selling at new
non-traditional retail locations the ilk of Grocerants with Ready-2-Eat and
Heat-N-Eat fresh prepared food.
Retailers
with high EQ listen to customers, teams, admit mistakes, face into difficult
conversations, create a high performing workplace and build strong teams as
they can bring people together via these skills. On the other hand, retailers
with low EQ are arrogant continue doing what they have always done, rigid doing
it the same way avoiding accountability while be insensitive customers.
Retailers
must automate, ordering, cooking processes, and marketing however it’s critical
that when doing so they do not relinquish the emotional quotient from the
customer equations according to our Grocerant Guru®. It is the emotional quotient that binds the
customer to the brand, product, and price of your services.
Since 1991 retail food consultancy Foodservice Solutions® of Tacoma, WA
has been the global leader in the Grocerant niche for more on Foodservice
Solutions® or for a
Grocerant Scorecard visit http://www.linkedin.com/in/grocerant, www.FoodserviceSolutions.us Email: Steve@FoodserviceSoltuions.us
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