Customer Service Interview English
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Lesson 2: How to greet customers
Stay on this lesson until you can say one clear answer, get AI feedback, and improve one weak area. The full course map is below the lesson if you need another topic.
Lesson workspace
Lesson 2: How to greet customers
Practice "How to greet customers" with a clear answer, one useful example, and a confident ending.
Lesson slide player
One visible task. Finish in about 12 minutes.
Follow the slides like a short class: learn, compare, build, speak, then prove readiness.
Slide 1 of 5: Learn
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Chapter 1 of 5
What this answer must do
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Understand the answer goal and simple structure before speaking.
Use a simple answer structure: short opening, one real example, and one closing sentence that connects your answer to the role or situation.
Simple structure
CARE: Calm tone, Acknowledge the issue, Respond clearly, End with next step.
Grammar focus
- Use one clear opening sentence.
- Use past tense for previous experience.
- Use because, for example, and as a result to connect ideas.
Useful words
- listen
- support
- solution
Speaking focus
- customers
Optional teacher notesNeed more detail? Open full notes and extra practice.Keep this closed during normal study. It is here for deeper review after you finish the lesson slides.OpenClose
Teacher shortcut
This lesson helps service applicants who need warm, simple greeting language for in-person and phone situations practice "How to greet customers" by learning to greet, offer help, and confirm the customer's need in natural English.
12-minute guided session
Do not read the whole page first. Use this lesson like a short class. Spend 2 minutes learning the target, 3 minutes comparing weak and strong answers, 3 minutes building your own version, 3 minutes speaking it out loud, and 1 minute checking the lowest-score area. This keeps the lesson practical and stops the learner from feeling lost in too much content.
What this lesson teaches
A greeting creates the first customer impression. The learner needs friendly tone, clear question, and professional pacing. Many learners struggle here because they jump to the solution before showing listening and empathy. The goal is not to memorize a perfect paragraph. The goal is to build a speakable answer that has a clear point, one useful detail, and a professional ending. When learners can repeat this structure in their own words, they become more confident in real interviews.
What the interviewer listens for
The listener is not grading fancy vocabulary first. They are listening for calm tone, listening, policy, and a respectful next step. A paid learner should prepare one customer, guest, or patient scenario with a clear next step, say it in simple English, and avoid this weak pattern: Do not argue, blame, or promise something outside policy. This turns the lesson from reading into a real interview skill check.
Framework: welcome-help-confirm-guide
Use this framework step by step: Use a warm greeting. Ask one clear help question. Listen and confirm the need. Guide the customer to the next step. This gives the answer order, but it still leaves space for your own real experience. If your English level is beginner, keep each step as one short sentence. If your level is higher, add one detail to the action or result.
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