The Ichiban Award is only bestowed on the top-performing retailers from across Europe, recognising those who have gone above and beyond to offer their customers the best possible service. Burrows Barnsley is celebrating winning its its fifth Ichiban award in 2022, taking honours in the large retailer category.
The business has been in Barnsley since 1999 and has a staff of around 50 at its 15,000m2 site. We spoke Steve Davidson, Regional Director of Burrows Motor Company, about what it takes to win the coveted Ichiban award what he thinks makes truly great customer service.
“The beauty of the award is it’s not something you can chase, you have to live and breathe customer service – it’s a team effort. There’s no target, we win it on the back of an excellent team doing the right things with every customer interaction.
“It’s about delivering Burrows’ culture which is driven by Steve Burrows. He founded his company in 1992 and opened the Toyota dealership in 1999 and he wanted to do it his way. He believes every customer has to be treated as if they’re the only customer in town – every customer is equally important, whether they’ve come in to buy a wiper blade or a Land Cruiser.”
Steve Davidson, Regional Director of Burrows Motor Company
“Elated is probably the word. The team is buzzing. We heard about it on the night of the BRITS, Toyotas ‘Best Retailer in Town’ awards. It’s held on the same night as the other BRIT awards so you could say we were nominated at the ‘BRITS’.
“Ichiban is an award of legends. We’ve won it before but to win it again means new starters feel recognised, making the effort they all put in all feel worthwhile. I heard one new member of staff say ‘I can’t believe I’m an Ichiban winner’.”
“Three months ago – I wasn’t in on the day – a lady came in with a puncture on her Corolla. She had been traveling from Leicester on the M1 to a job interview in Leeds. Our service department heard her story and instantly lent her a courtesy car. They did it for her – it’s what she needed. It was the right thing to do. When she came back and realised there was nothing to pay – we don’t charge for fixing punctures – she was over the moon. She later sent us some chocolates and told us she had got the job.”
Dawn Wall (Service Advisor), Nikki Lynch (Parts Supervisor), Dawn Mellor (Showroom Assistant) and Michael Jackson (Service Advisor)
“We use ‘Voice of the Customer’, Toyota’s central survey platform for CRS (customer recommendation score) and also online reviews on Google and more recently Feefo.
“The best feedback is talking to and listening to customers. Our staff will make changes if they see patterns of weakness. After Covid, we got back into washing customers’ cars again, but customers began saying their cars were not clean enough. So we hired another valeter – a simple fix.
“Another customer likes to read the Financial Times. We made a note of this on our system after he once, jokingly, complained of ‘not having his daily read’ available when he was at the dealership. The next time he came in we had bought the Financial Times for him. It’s about making interactions with our customers memorable.
“We’re not perfect. We acknowledge every review – if it’s negative we give our viewpoint. We’ve never had a bad review we weren’t aware of before it was posted. We always acknowledge when we get it wrong – apologising goes a long way.”
“The quality of the product means there’s lots of positive things to share with customers.
“The introduction of Toyota Warranty, up to a car’s tenth birthday is a game-changer. No other manufacturer can offer this level of belief in their products’ reliability.
“There is a negative – a flip side; customers now have so much faith and expect higher standards. What we did last month is not good enough today – we have to get better with every customer.”
“You either get it or you don’t – if you have to try you’re already on your back foot. Exceeding customer expectation is key and recognising that every customer will have their own unique expectation is vital to making them feel valued and understood.
“It’s important to empower your team. If anyone makes a bad decision but for all the right reasons they’ll never have any need for recourse. It gives them confidence – you could have a staff member who gives a kiddy a robot toy without charging for it. They need to be empowered to make decisions.”
Tony Thomas, Sales Manager, Burrows Motor Company
“We are prepared to listen to our team and customers and continuously adapt and evolve. We need to move with the times or be ahead of it.”
It was a fantastic experience and it delivered excellent levels of outstanding examples of customer care and attention – everything was perfect. Dealers also gave feedback to Toyota Motor Europe on our businesses.’
“It’s the greatest accolade. When we won our first award in 2014, I got the letter. Steve was on holiday so I rang Dean Cooper, our ops-director. ‘I’ve got this letter saying we’ve won an Ichiban’ I told him. He said ‘Get hold of Steve – it doesn’t matter he’s on holiday – he’ll want to know.’
“Steve told me winning the Ichiban is still the proudest moment of his career.
“It’s the proudest moment for me personally too. Each one – we’ve won it 5 times – makes it extra special.”
“Customers were grateful to be able to visit again after the first lockdown. They were glad to be back and mentioned how much they valued our protocols of distancing and our sanitising of their cars – they felt protected.
“Post-Covid, customers’ expectations have rocketed. They’re a lot less patient and want everything now. Our challenge is to adapt to this and keep ahead of what they expect.”
“We had a fantastic party. We closed Burrows Barnsley, put up a stage and invited all our staff, customers, and local charities. All Toyota GB’s Directors came and as did their President and Managing director, Agustin Martin. He gave a presentation on stage and explained what Ichiban means to him and his company.
“Our charity partners also spoke to say how our support helps them and what it means to them.
We also presented an Ichiban pin to every member of staff individually.
“We opened some beers, the DJ turned up the music and we all had some fun.”