When Al Hopkins a young boy he
watched the other ten-year-olds wait for customers to stop by their sidewalk
lemonade stands in the hot summer sun.
Al abandoned the “stand” concept and took his lemonade business
door-to-door. He made enough money in
one summer to buy a new Schwinn Flyer bicycle with a siren!
Imaginative service is
distinctive, unique, unusual, atypical, unexpected, and all the other words you
can think of that insinuate a pleasant surprise. This brand of service yields in customers the
exact same emotional reaction that might be created by witnessing a rainbow you
did not expect, or getting a novel gift that communicates the giver knew you
better than you realized.
What would your customer
experience be like if you had a magic
wand and could change one important aspect of the customer experience? Or, if you had unlimited resources? Or, if the new experience was going to
carry the name of your child or your parents?
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