Each day the lovely
veterinary technicians at our practice call all of the clients from the
previous day to see how they are doing after their vaccinations or surgical procedures.
They politely call each one and listen to the owner’s reports, answering
questions as they arise. It is usually a somewhat pleasant exercise. Clients are often friendly, appreciative, and
grateful for the fact that we care enough to call them for a progress report.
Not so on Friday.
On Friday I was working in
the pharmacy area (where the call-back phone is located), getting ready to
enter an exam room when I heard my technician Samantha making a follow-up call. The gentleman had been in with his dog on
Thursday for a routine annual examination and vaccines with one of the doctors. When the client answered, Sam politely said, “Hello,
this is Sam from Warren Woods Veterinary Hospital and I was calling to see how
Fritz is doing after his vaccination appointment yesterday.” What happened next was so fascinating that I had
to stop what I was doing to listen to Sam’s side of the call.
She repeated the entire
sentence again but a little bit louder. “This
is Sam from Warren Woods, I was calling about Fritz, to see how he is doing
after yesterday’s visit.” Then, “Yes, I
can hear you, can you hear me?” she said politely. Then again in an even louder voice, “This is
Sam from…………., perhaps I should call you again on another line.” Sam kept getting louder and the gentleman kept
telling her to speak louder. After about
the fifth or sixth time she repeated herself, each time upping the volume
saying, “I am sorry, I cannot speak any louder, but I would be happy to call
you back on a different line, if you like.”
“I AM SORRY but I CANNOT get any LOUDER, maybe we have a bad
connection.” Then she paused and said, “Of
course, let me place you on hold for a moment so I can get her for you.” She placed the phone on hold, looked at me
with desperation in her eyes - as the rest of the team, now very interested
looked on - and said: “He wants to speak to the boss because he said that I am very
rude.”
I could only laugh out loud
and the absurdity of her situation. I
had heard the whole conversation and Sam was not rude at all. In fact, she is one of the sweetest most
patient people I know. She was indeed
talking very loudly, but not
rude. Hilarious!
So, what do you do when
someone falsely accuses you of being rude or handling them (or their pet) in an
unsatisfactory manner; especially when you know that you are in the right? Our first instinct is to fight back. Our natural reaction is to go into defense or
fight mode; the automatic response - our fight or flight reaction. The problem is that you can’t run away from
your clients, so flight is off the table.
When someone falsely
accuses you, stay calm and keep a positive mindset. Getting upset or fighting has no place in
this conversation. Give up the idea of being right. There is no right or wrong, there is only understanding.
If you become agitated or defensive you will not be able to diffuse or remedy
the situation.
Assume that what the client
is telling you is true - to them - and try to understand why it is true. Once you understand where they are coming
from you can move into solution mode. Agree
on the facts of the situation and in this case the fact was that the client
could not hear Sam properly. No fault of
Sam, but the client needed to know that her intentions were honorable because she
just wanted to check on his dog. Once we
got past the confusion and moved to understanding, we were able to agree that
the phone connection was the problem, not our sweet Samantha.
“Seek first to understand
and then to be understood.”
Stephen R. Covey
Dr. Julie Cappel
Join Me on The Veterinary Life Coach Podcast! Click the Link.
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-veterinary-life-coach-podcast-with-dr-julie-cappel/id1451549730
Join Me on The Veterinary Life Coach Podcast! Click the Link.
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-veterinary-life-coach-podcast-with-dr-julie-cappel/id1451549730
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