Portable Sanitation Association International

Association Insight July 27 2016

Issue link: http://psai.uberflip.com/i/708096

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 3 of 9

W EEKLY EDITION JULY 27, 2016 Dealing with Customers You Don't Want to Serve …continued By Karleen Kos, PSAI Executive Dir ector • Train your staff to recognize when they can and should deny service based on your policies, and when they cannot. Help them out by giving the sales team a checklist of questions to ask when the order is placed. If you don't do weddings, birthday par ties, or protests, the person taking the order should ask about that up front and explain your policies proactively. Teach your service and delivery drivers to recognize dangerous situations and how to communicate about them in a non - discriminatory way. • Stick to your policies consistently. It is much more credible to say "no" to little Jimmy's birthday party and not have it seen as discrimination if you say "no" to everyone's birthday party. If you say to the protesters, "Sorry, we don't serve that area" be sure they aren't staring at one of your units across the street from where they plan to be. Credibility is based on consistency. Avoid negative blowback from denial of service. The Kentucky case has been all over the internet since it occurred earlier this month. Perhaps it hasn't hurt the operator locally, but odds are good it didn't do the company any favors either. In order to minimize such repercussions consider the following if you deny service. CONTINUED ON PAGE 5 PAGE 4

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

view archives of Portable Sanitation Association International - Association Insight July 27 2016