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Member Blog: Stellar Customer Service, Transparency, & Education Drive Cannabis Success

by Gary Paulin, VP of Sales and Client Services at Lightning Labels

With expansive product choices, it’s no longer enough to rely solely on product quality and availability. Today’s maturing cannabis marketplace requires differentiation to resonate and succeed.

Three pillars of that differentiation are stellar customer service, total transparency, and excellent education. At the core of each, sincerity and truth must predominate. In this age of “fake news,” anything that doesn’t seem trustworthy and true likely will backfire on the company sooner or later.

It only takes one unsubstantiated quality control or product claim to hit the social media lie detector, then potentially go viral. At the very least, one consumer badmouthing your company via word-of-mouth and/or digital messaging will harm your reviews and ratings. In most cases, the damage will be undetectable until it reaches a level where revenues and reputation are noticeably impacted.

Following are four basics of stellar customer service, transparency, and education:

  1. Interact authentically. Scripts and canned phrases instinctively don’t resonate with most consumers. One obvious example is the “I’m so sorry you’re having a problem” response. How likely is it that the person is really sorry and not just parroting something they’ve been told to repeat time and time again? Instead, communicate in a real way by tuning into what the existing or prospective customer is trying to address.

For example, when someone complains about lengthy waits to receive live phone support (including disconnects while waiting), it’s okay to say something like, “I get it. We’ve been having challenges. Now that we’re on the phone together, let’s address your needs right away. And, please give me your phone number, just in case this call drops. I’ll call you right back.”

  1. Offer multichannel communications preferences. Some people want live phone support, not a digital option. Chat bots can be extraordinarily frustrating unless the programming and ability is advanced. Ditto for “live chat.” As much as possible, make it easy and meet everyone’s preferences. Email, live phone support, texting, website knowledge center, and digital chat should all be offered to meet the customer in a way that works best.

     

  2. Offer total and transparent education. Knowledge centers (and associated forums) and FAQs can be excellent tools to help provide priority information, but they’re only one piece of the puzzle. Consumer questions and concerns can cover anything. There should be an easy way to find more information through the above-referenced channels as needed. Product labels can provide easy access to a variety of information, starting with label content and extending to either Augmented Reality or QR digital gateways for more in-depth education. Those digital gateways should contain valuable information, along with easily found follow-up calling, emailing, live chat, and additional educational options (including possibly Knowledge Center, FAQs, and keyword-search forums/articles, et al).

“Full disclosure” should be at the core of all things educational, both in information repositories and customer service support. For example, CBD can make some people cranky and anxious. Full disclosure must override the desire to sell. By fully informing a consumer of risks as well as rewards, the experience is much more likely to result in high marks for the company.

Conversely, incomplete or inaccurate information provided by salespeople motivated only by making sales will backfire when less than optimum outcomes occur. In contrast, a salesperson willing and able to fully educate will help build long-term customer relationships with the company. 

  1. Hire motivated, attentive, smart people. No matter what policies and training are in place, ultimately companies need to focus on hiring the best candidates — those dedicated to top-notch customer service, truthtelling, and education. Workforce shortages are not a valid reason to abandon these core values in the name of expedient hiring. Be committed to employee wants and needs, and be prepared to follow through. Offer generous wages, but beware of those who seem overly money motivated and demanding. They likely will be gone as soon as the next “shiny toy” opportunity comes along.

There are companies that have weathered supply chain and workforce shortage issues — and even inflationary pressures — well. One that comes to mind is Costco. Unlike many retailers during the pandemic, their quality of service has remained high. Product availability and selection have been maintained. Prices, although subject to some upward movement, don’t seem to have risen as much as most retailers.

Clearly, Costco found solutions instead of blaming challenging conditions and using those as an excuse for failure. Follow this example. Find ways to do more with less, get creative about becoming more efficient, and plan ahead so that emergent problems don’t become overly taxing. 

Cannabis companies that excel in being trusted, liked, and respected will outperform their competitors willing to live with mediocrity.


Gary Paulin is VP of Sales and Client Services at Lightning Labels, a Denver-based custom label printer that uses state-of-the-art printing technology to provide affordable, full-color custom labels and custom stickers of all shapes and sizes. Contact: sales@lightninglabels.com; 800.544.6323 or 303.481.2304.

 

 

Member Blog: Know Your Regulations, Know Your Labels

by Gary Paulin, Director of Sales of Lightning Labels

Agility, timely data and printing performance drive cannabis label compliance

Ability to move quickly, accurately, and competitively is the lifeblood of cannabis purveyors. Timely compliance in such areas as labels and packaging is critical to staying in business; agility in grabbing a competitive edge is crucial to profitability.

To help make that happen, cannabis-savvy label experts must be able to provide near real-time information and clear, straightforward guidance to ensure full and timely compliance. With labeling and packaging regulations constantly changing across the land, getting and staying current is much easier said than done.

Sweeping changes include revising labels to make cannabis products less appealing to children, listing THC and CBD amounts, designating “hemp” versus “marijuana” products, and establishment of label regulations in states with new marijuana legalization laws. Then, there’s the entire country of Canada, which will legalize recreational marijuana effective October 2018.

California purveyors in particular are feeling the heat. New packaging and label regulations went into effect July 1, and Proposition 65 rules impacting all product labeling and packaging are now in force (full compliance deadline was Aug. 30).

Critical consequences of non-compliance

California’s July 1 requirements alone proved difficult for a variety of cannabis companies. A report on KPIX, the San Francisco Bay Area CBS affiliate, pointed out: “Empty Shelves At Some Bay Area Pot Dispensaries After New July 1 Label Law… Many California marijuana dispensaries seeing their profits are going up in smoke. Their shelves are sitting empty ever since a new labeling law took effect Sunday… the Associated Press estimated the entire industry would lose nearly $400 million because of unsold product.”

Obviously, lack of knowledge and compliance can carry severe penalties, crippling operations and hobbling profits. Here are a few tips to help cannabis companies stay on top of evolving labeling and packaging regulations and avoid regulatory repercussions:

Partner with companies providing accurate and complete label and packaging guidance, both on the information and hands-on production and printing fronts. There are companies dedicated to maintaining current and complete databases about rules and regs in municipalities and states where both medical and recreational marijuana laws are in effect. And there are label production and printing companies with extensive track records in creating cannabis labels. Make sure you get up to speed in both areas.

Confirm “agility ability” of these entities. All the information and capabilities in the world can be for naught if the capacity for executing quickly and competently doesn’t exist. As the cannabis industry continues to twist and turn all over the place, including labeling and packaging requirements, it’s absolutely critical to be able to move with—or optimally ahead of—developments. Having consistent, reliable resources in place can make the difference between plentiful shelves and profits and the emptiness associated with non-compliance—as many California purveyors discovered the hard way.

Use these established resources for predictive modeling. While predicting the future of cannabis rules and regulations may be difficult, cannabis companies with access to ample intel, experience and expertise may be able to better prepare for the future. Information showing trends, innovative ways to address what’s ahead with labels and packaging that “think ahead of the curve,” and overall insights into a variety of marketplaces can help make this happen.


To address both branding/printing and business/legal intelligence requirements at state and local levels, Denver-based strategic partners Lightning Labels and Highmark Data are giving cannabis purveyors fast and agile one-stop access to much-needed resources pertaining to labels and packaging. Lightning Labels is a Denver-based label printer that has been offering state-of-the-art affordable, full-color custom labels and custom stickers of all shapes and sizes to cannabis purveyors for more than a decade. Highmark Data provides comprehensive business and legal intelligence needed to make the smartest and most compliant decisions in municipalities and states nationwide.

Gary Paulin is Lightning Labels’ Director of Sales and Client Services.

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