{"id":196662,"date":"2015-05-07T00:21:15","date_gmt":"2015-05-07T07:21:15","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/communicatebetterblog.com\/mildred_pierce\/"},"modified":"2015-05-07T00:21:55","modified_gmt":"2015-05-07T07:21:55","slug":"customer-service-advice-from-mildred-pierce","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/customerthink.com\/customer-service-advice-from-mildred-pierce\/","title":{"rendered":"Customer Service Advice From Mildred Pierce"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"signagemp-thumb-520x323\"<\/a>While\u00a0Mildred Pierce<\/a> anxiously eats her ham sandwich at a restaurant in Los Angeles, she witnesses a waitress being\u00a0fired for stealing tips and sees an opportunity.<\/p>\n

Never having worked in a restaurant before, she makes her way into the kitchen and asks for a job as a waitress as clearly there is an opening.<\/p>\n

She\u2019s dressed\u00a0in a uniform, given a few instructions, handed a pencil and paper then told to go take orders from customers.<\/p>\n

While Mildred needed the job to pay her bills, she also had bigger plans: to open her own restaurant.<\/p>\n

But, in order to succeed, she needed to get her hands dirty as a waitress and truly understand what the customer wants.<\/p>\n

She eventually figures it out and opens more than one\u00a0restaurant with these three key elements:<\/p>\n

A Simple, Consistent Menu and Pricing<\/strong><\/p>\n

Mildred\u2019s Chicken and Waffles opens in the 1940\u2019s and each item is 85 cents. She saves her customers time by not having\u00a0a paper menu because she has only two main course options and three side choices:<\/p>\n