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Barry S. Farah - Go Ahead!: Unleash a Contagious Customer Success Culture

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Barry S. Farah Go Ahead!: Unleash a Contagious Customer Success Culture
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The objective of this book is to provide the framework to unleash a contagious customer success culture. Customer success is a mind-set. Mine developed from years of observation and passion. Throughout my life, Ive started and run several companies. Some have been more successful than others, but Im an entrepreneur at my core and love to add value for the customer.

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Go
Ahead!

Unleash a Contagious
Customer Success Culture

Barry S. Farah

Go Ahead Unleash a Contagious Customer Success Culture - image 1

AuthorHouse

1663 Liberty Drive

Bloomington, IN 47403

www.authorhouse.com

Phone: 1 (800) 839-8640

2019 Barry S. Farah. All rights reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author.

Published by AuthorHouse 05/15/2019

ISBN: 978-1-7283-1197-5 (sc)

ISBN: 978-1-7283-1196-8 (hc)

ISBN: 978-1-7283-1195-1 (e)

Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Getty Images are models,
and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.

Certain stock imagery Getty Images.

Customer Success is a trademark of Barry Farah

The Magic Wand is a trademark of Barry Farah

Go Ahead! is a trademark of Barry Farah

Titles by Barry Farah may be purchased for business or promotional use or for special sales. For more information

please write to:

Special Markets Department

Baron Books

1880 Office Club Pointe

Colorado Springs, CO 80920

Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.

Table of Contents

Also by Barry S. Farah

Customer Success, 1998

The Magic Wand, 2017

Dedication

To my son, David, and my daughter, Alli. As young adults they have both caught the vision of the customer success mindset. In their respective young careers, they have earned accolades from their superiors. They are differentiating themselves by adding value with entrepreneurial energy. They both make me very proud. And, I love em.

Acknowledgments

I am grateful to the hundreds of wonderful people I have had the honor to work with over the years a great customer success team!

Special thanks to Randy Welsch and Scott Roehr, who really embody the customer success mindset. They are successful in their own business endeavors, but previously I had the honor of working with them. Randy was president of Master Solutions, LLC (MSL) and Scott was COO of The Personnel Department, Inc. before I sold those companies. They provided excellent suggestions for this book, but more importantly they live it.

And, to John Bolin, a fantastic guy creative, smart and a lot of fun. He gets customer success and helped with the title. And, to the copyeditor, Tia Smithshe is great.

And to Tracy Lyn of Virtually Possible Designs. How did she hit a winner like you see on the cover? By being very customer success minded. Great job Tracy!

The objective of this book is to provide the framework to unleash a contagious customer success culture. Customer success is a mindset. Mine developed from years of observation and passion. Throughout my life, Ive started and run several companies. Some have been more successful than others, but Im an entrepreneur at my core and love to add value for the customer.

It seems like I have always had customers. In elementary school, I sold Christmas cards and flashlights door to door. In junior high, I squeezed my own lawn care business in between soccer games. In high school, I owned a profitable landscaping business and sold siding, vacuum cleaners, water treatment equipment, and steel buildings. During college, I owned a tree-trimming, landscaping, and remodeling business.

By the time I obtained my undergraduate degree at twenty-one, it seemed I had experienced a business career, but I had much more to learn. After a two-year stint at IBM, I earned an MBA, worked for Ford Motor Company, and then joined the Strategic Consulting division of Crowe Chizek. These experiences taught me people management, disciplined my problem-solving skills, and strengthened my financial analytics and my strategic planning ability. I was on the fast track but realized that, for me, striking out on my own was the better path. So I did.

In 1991, at twenty-eight, I built my first company as an adultThe Personnel Department, Inc.and ran it for more than twenty years. Concurrently, at thirty-four, I built a satellite and radar systems business and ran it for twelve years. Our guys were the architects on a complex upgrade of satellite and radar systemssome likened it to swapping out a jet engine while in flight. In 2010, I sold that company to the developers of NASAs Hubble Telescope program.

In my thirties, I realized my greatest satisfaction as an entrepreneur was more than making a profit; it was the joy of helping others succeed. I was profit-motivated, but I wanted a corporate culture that was bigger than money.

I wanted to create an environment where everyone could grow, and where we helped our customers in exceptional ways. I wanted a company that was bursting with energy and highly respected.

We experienced some success. I expanded my company into a full suite of business services in forty-three states and three countries at its peak before I started selling the business to four different buyers over a ten-year period.

I launched into commercial developments in Colorado, California, and North Dakota. Things were going well until I decided to build a large hotel in Minot, North Dakota, when the price of oil was at its peak. We opened the doors on timebut oil plummeted from $110 a barrel to $26. And occupancy followed the price of oil. I got my butt kicked.

I jumped back into technology in 2014 with a Capital Partner. I acquired four technology companies; put my cultural stamp of Integrity, Innovation, and Invitation upon them; served as CEO; and, at the time of this writing, just closed on selling my stake back to the Capital Partner.

At the core of my personal purpose, I enjoy creating an exceptional culture that opens the door for others to achieve great things. What Ive discovered and implemented along the way is a customer success philosophy that makes business more fun because it is based on values and principles first.

In 1998, I wrote my first book on customer success. Im told that I coined the term. In 2017, I wrote The Magic Wand , describing in story form the five steps to deliver an exceptional customer experience. In this book, Ill distinguish customer success from customer service; describe how to build a customer success culture, hire the right people, and sell with integrity; and propose a plan to sustain it. I argue that customer success protects you from being a casualty of disruption.

The roots of disruption are within. We often constrain ourselves from offering a great customer experience. In this book, I argue that setting people free to break the rulesgiving them the authority to solve the customers actual problemwill equip you to gradually disrupt yourself before you are a casualty of a nimble competitor.

Go Ahead! set your people free to lead their domain, to be proactive, to deliver what your customers really want before they ask. Unleash the positive peer pressure that comes from a customer success culture. It is not based on rulesit is a mindset, and it is contagious. People prefer an uplifting, energetic, problem-solving culture. It is a lot of fun.

I hope these principles are helpful to you.

Get closer than ever to your customers. So close, in fact, that you tell them what they need well before they realize it themselves. Steve Jobs

Sears, Roebuck and Company sold everything from hubcaps to house kits, had a great company culture, and minted millionaire retirees way before Silicon Valley. With their vast resources, ever wonder why they didnt become Google or Amazon or Walmart?

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