The following is a reprint of a blog by Seth Godin. Seth has great daily blogs on marketing, storytelling, ideas that spread and work worth doing. He is well worth following. We're reprinting it here as FECs and location-based entertainment facilities can learn a lot from how the State Department conducts its business as Seth explains.
Ambassadors do two things that are really difficult for most people within organizations:
If you work for a company that you don't own, if you interact with customers, you're a brand ambassador. The person who runs the cash register or answers the phone or makes sales calls is a brand ambassador, in the world on behalf of the amorphous brand, whatever that is.
I recently bought a few shirts from a big chain. They left the anti-theft tags on the shirts, which of course meant a drive and a hassle to go back to a different store in the chain to get them taken off.
Challenge number one is that the disrespected, overworked cashier will never be asked about what she learned from her interaction with me. There's nothing in place for information to flow.
And challenge number two is that she steadfastly refused to apologize for the hassle. It wasn't her fault, she knew, so what was there to apologize for?
We invented ambassadors because nothing can replace face-to-face interaction, particularly when messages travel sometimes quite slowly through complex organizations. Just like now.
This seems obvious, and it is, until you realize that organizations make two huge mistakes:
Would you send the clerk on aisle 7 to speak to a head of state or vital partner on behalf of your company? Because that's what he's doing right now.
Our would you sent one of your foodservice staff or game room technicians to speak to your banker or one of your investors? Because that's what she's doing right now..