Both of those are easy, low-cost fixes for your parts store or service center, respectively, but to a customer, those are insurmountable problems—that’s why they came to you. Asking someone, “Whaddya want, bub?” doesn’t work if you don’t possess the ability and drive to keep a customer happy without a major financial penalty to your employer.
Allow me to take a brief aside to the shop owners and parts store managers. Now might be a good time to think about huddling up and communicating this ability explicitly to your staff if you haven’t in the past. “If a customer is getting worked up and making things right for them costs less than X or labor hours come to less than Y, you’re cleared to make it happen.” Having that ability will help workers be confident that fixing a problem for a customer is the thing to do—and reminds them to think of the bottom line.
There will be customers who are not mollified at this stage. They’re still angry, and often they’re not being reasonable people. It was clear some people just wanted to be ornery and yell and make a fuss, and you know what I’d do?
I’d offer that as an alternative.
“Look, I get it, this isn’t a great situation, and you haven’t given me a reasonable solution we can both live with. I can see you’re angry, and that’s OK. Maybe you just want to yell at me for a while. I know that can feel better, and you know what? Part of my paycheck covers getting yelled at, so if you want to unload on me for a spell, that’s fine. I’m still gonna try and help you when you’re done.”
It takes a real sociopath to keep going for very long after that. The concentration of actual nutjobs like that is low. Odds are excellent if you get someone to this point, they step back for a second, smile or laugh, and reapproach you, often with a more cooperative spirit. I feel as though at this juncture I need to warn you that this, too, is not foolproof. If you offer to let someone yell at you, every now and again you are gonna have to stand there while someone hollers at you.
It doesn’t happen often, but it does happen. I felt—and still do—it’s a pretty safe gamble to make because the strategy of simply asking what someone wants works so well most of the time. Give it a try some time. It’s kind of a fun little sociological experiment you can perform right at the counter.