It's a BLAST to SERVE - Where Customer Service Meets Strategy

It's a BLAST to SERVE - Where Customer Service Meets Strategy

por Keith Hessel
Temporada 1
Lead Like a Human
When real life hits your team, leadership shows its true face. This episode explores a powerful Reddit story that forces leaders to choose between productivity and humanity — and why empathy is not a weakness. Episode Description Most leaders say they care about their people. Until it costs them something. In this episode, we break down a real management dilemma involving loss, grief, and responsibility. You’ll learn: Why empathy is a leadership skill, not a personality trait How emotional intelligence prevents long-term burnout What SERVE looks like when policies don’t apply How teams remember how you treated them — forever This episode isn’t about metrics. It’s about meaning.
Lack of Training = Lack of Time
When reps aren’t trained, customers pay the price. So does your team. This episode exposes how leadership shortcuts create long calls, repeat contacts, and burned-out employees — and how SERVE fixes it upstream. Episode Description Everyone says they don’t have time to train. Then they wonder why everything takes longer. In this episode, we analyze a Reddit post that perfectly captures the hidden cost of undertraining. You’ll learn: Why poor training creates endless escalations How “figure it out” cultures destroy confidence The leadership myth that training slows teams down How SERVE reframes training as a force multiplier Training isn’t optional. It’s operational leverage.
Stop Stonewalling Customers!
A loyal customer finally walks away. Not because of price. Not because of competition. Because no one listened. This episode breaks down how small service failures stack up until trust collapses — and how BLAST could have stopped the bleed. Episode Description Loyalty isn’t fragile. It’s neglected. In this episode, we unpack a real Reddit story where a long-time customer did everything right — and the company still lost them. You’ll learn: Why “policy” is the fastest way to lose trust How frontline reps unintentionally escalate churn Where leadership failed before the customer ever called How BLAST de-escalation would have changed the outcome This isn’t a rant. It’s a warning. If you lead CX, support, or retention, this episode is required listening.
The Human Transfer Machine
This episode explores the frustrating trend of customer service departments becoming unhelpful obstacles rather than solutions. By analyzing real-world examples and Reddit stories, the host discusses how restrictive management policies often tie the hands of frontline employees, forcing them to "stonewall" customers or escalate simple issues to the C-suite. The episode challenges middle and upper management to shift their perspective, focusing on employee enablement and treating their staff with the same care they expect for their customers.
Phone Zombies
Episode Title: “Phone Zombies & Blank Stares” Framework Used: SERVE (Smile, Engage, Relate, Verify, Extra Mile) Reddit Post Read in Full:“What happened to customer service?” — r/TalesFromTheCustomer Summary "It's a Blast to Serve" - Episode 1: Phone Zombies This inaugural episode of the customer service podcast introduces host Keith Hessel, founder of Serve Business Consulting, and his mission to transform customer service disasters into five-star experiences using the SERVE method (Smile, Engage, Relate, Verify, Extra Mile). Key Topics Covered: The Phone Zombie Problem: Keith addresses the epidemic of retail and service employees being distracted by their phones while on duty. He shares observations of workers scrolling through social media, face-timing, or otherwise disengaged while customers wait for assistance. The SERVE Method Breakdown: Smile: Sets the tone for the entire interaction Engage: Make eye contact, actively interact with customers Relate: Build connection through small talk and acknowledgment Verify: Confirm you've addressed their needs Extra Mile: Do something memorable, even small gestures Career Perspective: Keith emphasizes that excelling in customer service roles—even entry-level positions—is the pathway to advancement. He challenges the "minimum wage, minimum effort" mentality, arguing that demonstrating excellence is how you move up in any organization. Call to Action: Listeners are invited to submit their own customer service stories (good, bad, or ugly) at servebc.com/blast for potential feature in future episodes.
Human Transfer Machine - Preview
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Preview for our upcoming episode "Human Transfer Machine"
Phone Zombies Preview 2
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What does Serve Business Consulting do?
Phone Zombies Preview 1
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How does "Smile" work in the SERVE Method?