Home Opinion Improving your competitive advantage as a service provider (Part V)

Improving your competitive advantage as a service provider (Part V)

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By Oluwole Dada

 

The last four series of this important topic have built the case for quality, speed, people development, and training as the part of the foundational pillars of competitive advantage for any service provider. Today, I would like to talk about something that most service providers overlook entirely: parking space and the security of the customer’s most valuable asset in your premises.

If you run a restaurant, a hospital, a supermarket, a spa, or any other service providing entity, and your customers have to circle the block three times before they find somewhere to leave their car or worse, park on the main road and spend their entire visit anxious about their vehicle being towed away, then you have a problem that no amount of excellent food, skilled doctors, or well-trained staff can fully overcome. The customer’s experience began before they walked through your door. And it began badly.

This is exactly one of the premises upon which Shoprite was built in Nigeria. They always have a large parking space. This was not an afterthought in their site selection process. It was a deliberate commercial criterion. Shoprite’s leadership understood, from decades of retail experience and rigorous consumer research, that friction at the point of access directly reduces footfall and that footfall is the oxygen of a physical retail business. When competitors were selecting sites based primarily on rental cost and foot traffic, Shoprite was also asking: can our customers get here easily, and can they park safely? 

The rival supermarket or restaurant that ignores parking as a major concern is making a bad customer retention decision. Someone reading this might say: what is the big deal about a parking space? A parking space is not really about parking. It is about whether you have thought about your customer’s full journey, not just the transaction at the point of service. It is a signal received before a single word is exchanged, before a product is touched, and before a service is rendered. That signal matters more than most service leaders realize.

When Apple designed its retail stores, Steve Jobs spent months obsessing over every element of the physical customer journey: the approach to the store, the sight lines from the street, the flow of movement inside, the placement of products, and the location of the Genius Bar. The parking situation around flagship Apple stores in high-density urban locations was factored into site selection. But the broader principle was this: Apple treated the physical environment as a communication medium. Every element of the space was saying something to the customer before any Apple employee spoke a word. That philosophy produced the highest revenue-per-square-foot of any retail format in the world at its peak. The environment was not decoration. It was strategy.

In healthcare, the Mayo Clinic consistently rated among the world’s top medical institutions built its patient experience model around the insight that anxiety begins in the car park. Patients arriving for serious medical consultations are already under emotional stress. A chaotic, poorly signposted, or inadequate parking environment amplifies that stress before the clinical encounter even begins, affecting how patients feel, how they communicate with their doctors, and how they rate their overall experience. Mayo Clinic’s facilities investment in parking, and environmental flow is a clinical decision as much as an operational one. They understood that the building starts at the car park gate.

Note that offering parking is only the first half of the commitment. The second half and the one that is even more frequently neglected is the security of the vehicles that park in your facility. When a customer accepts your implicit invitation to park at your premises, a contract is formed. This may not be a legal contract, but perhaps a psychological one. The customer has made themselves vulnerable to you. They have left a significant asset in your premises. What you do with that trust determines not just their experience today, but whether they will ever feel comfortable enough to return.

In cases you are unable to provide a dedicated parking facility, you can provide assurance. A visible security presence near where customers park, a parking attendant, periodic patrols, lighting, clear signage, valet partnerships, proactive guest communications, and staff trained to acknowledge the inconvenience and offer the best available alternative.  These are not expensive interventions, but their absence communicates something that no amount of good service inside your walls can fully counteract. The absence of it simply communicates that customers are not at the heart of your plans.

The above items discussed are intangibles that nobody talks about until they are the reasons customers migrate to competitors.

 

 

Oluwole Dada is the General Manager at SecureID Limited, Africa’s largest smart card manufacturing plant in Lagos, Nigeria.

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