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How’s Your Client Service?
As Good As This?

By Sheryl | May 5, 2008

I’m veering off the law path with this one but I think there’s a story here for solo lawyers, too.

So, I paint. A little and not well, but I enjoy it a lot. I haven’t done it in awhile though, and my supplies were nonexistent. So I shopped around online for a new source. I found Madison Art.

I picked out some paper for my watercolors — my usual medium. But then I noticed these table easels, and I thought, “What an awesome idea — I could use these in the office on the other side of the desk, so I could catch the light.”

(For those of you who don’t know, I enjoy the very special gift of a huge home office that used to be a huge sitting room on the backside of my late mom’s house on the banks of the Intracoastal Waterway. It’s 90% window, which means I get awesome light, and one of the few undeveloped views of the banks on the opposite side of the water.)

Then I saw these sets that included table easels — particularly this one that included oil paints. And that brought back art lessons of my childhood, and I thought, “Ooh. Yes.” And I bought one, along with some turpenoid and a wooden palette.

I got a fairly prompt shipping notice (within 48 hours or so), and about five business days later, the package arrived. Unfortunately, when I opened the box, what I found was a palette and a watercolor table top easel set, not an oil one. No turpenoid, no paper.

Oopsie.

So, I emailed the store promptly and explained the situation. What I got back, almost immediately was “We’ll straighten it out, immediately.”

A few hours later, I got a new shipping notice in my email inbox, followed within 24 hours by another note from the store telling me that the missing items — the oil table top easel set, the turpenoid, and the paper — were on their way. And the watercolor set I’d been shipped by mistake?

“Keep it.”

OK, so obviously I’m a fan of Madison Art for life now. Even if I were to find a lower price on a needed supply somewhere else, I can state that right now I’d fully prefer to deal with Madison Art.

What was it that converted me from casual purchaser to fangirl? Was it just the “keep it”? I have to be honest, that’s part of it. It’s way cool to have more watercolors (though I don’t really need two table easels).

But it’s more than that. It’s the whole of how I was treated, and how they responded to the error. Promptly, with a real apology — which always consists of three parts:

  1. Recognition of the wrong (”This is my error”)
  2. The apology (”I’m sorry that happened”)
  3. The fix (”Here’s what I’ve done to make it right”)

Look, everybody makes mistakes — even lawyers and great internet art stores. It’s how we deal with them — make them right, make the affected party whole again — that’s what people remember and judge us on, and rightly so.

And if you want to exercise your inner visual artist I know a great place to get supplies.

Topics: Psychology of Inspiration, Resources for the Inspired Solo |

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  • About

    Sheryl Sisk Schelin is the writer/blogger/lawyer/coach behind The Inspired Solo. She lives, practices, writes and blogs from her home on the banks of the Intracoastal Waterway in North Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.

    The Inspired Solo is for every law student and practicing attorney who dreams of a solo practice, wonders about hanging a shingle, or just wants to know more about what life as a solo practitioner is really like.

    Much more than just a legal business blog, The Inspired Solo is about The Power of One and how you can tap into that power to create the law practice, and the life, of your dreams.

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