
By Reggie Todd, Leader Coach, Studer Education
In K-12 education, “customer service” is not a department — service excellence is at the heart of everything we do. As we continue to build cultures of excellence in our schools, it is essential for district leaders to prioritize service excellence, ensuring that we are not just meeting the immediate needs of our communities, but building trust and pride for the long run.
Recently, I had the privilege to moderate a panel discussion with outstanding leaders at Destination High Performance. Below, I have synthesized their leadership insights into key actions every K-12 leader can take:
1. Clarify Your “Why” — Make Service the Core Purpose
Begin by reaffirming that service is not an afterthought, but it is the central purpose of your work. Ask your team: “How do we want to be known by our customers?” Consistently communicating this purpose grounds everyone in a shared mission.
2. Co-Create Standards of Excellence With Your Team
Service standards cannot be a top-down mandate.
Kelly Krostag, Assistant Superintendent for Human Resources for Escambia County Public Schools in Florida, engaged her HR team in developing their own standards of excellence. This inclusive process helped staff articulate what great service looks like, from greeting everyone with a smile to following the “touch back rule,” ensuring every inquiry gets a response within 24 hours — even if it is just to say, “I’m working on it.” These collaboratively-developed standards quickly transformed the department’s culture and increased employee engagement.
3. Make Feedback Actionable And Response Visible
Great service in K-12 school districts is built on consistent, actionable feedback. Julie Giannini-Previde, Superintendent of McKinleyville Union School District, highlighted the impact of leader rounding with families during parent-teacher conferences.
In the context of K-12 education leadership, leader rounding is a structured practice where leaders intentionally engage in regular, purposeful conversations with stakeholders to build relationships, surface insights, and gather feedback — transforming everyday interactions into actionable information that strengthens trust, informs decision-making, and drives continuous improvement.
By creating space for honest conversations and following up with clear actions, her district built pride and trust — even as they worked through tough feedback. Making visible improvements based on feedback demonstrates integrity and builds stronger connections.
4. Protect and Prioritize Instructional Leadership
Service excellence is not just about responsiveness, it is about focus.
Dustin Horras, Superintendent of Sand Creek Zone, School District 49 in Colorado, shared that ensuring principals and administrators dedicate time daily to instructional leadership is crucial. By developing systems for office staff to handle certain urgencies, his leaders have more time to be visible in classrooms and support learning.
Clarity of purpose helps everyone understand that protecting instructional time is, at its core, serving students better.
5. Recognize and Appreciate According to Your Service Standards
Reward and recognition reinforce your service standards. Whether it is superhero awards, thank you notes, or department shout-outs, acknowledging service excellence encourages staff and keeps standards alive.
6. Build Robust Onboarding Systems
Both Julie and Dustin emphasized the importance of structured, intentional onboarding. New employees need a clear, replicable system to help them acclimate. This goes beyond a list of procedures. By providing mentors, timely check-ins throughout the first 90 days, and ongoing support, you can avoid the “sink-or-swim” experience and help employees belong from the start.
7. Make Service Excellence Part of Your Strategy
Whether “service” is a named pillar or embedded throughout your strategic plan, it is critical to ensure it is continually measured and prioritized. Escambia County Public Schools ties service and employee engagement directly to strategic goals, routinely measuring progress and holding each other accountable.
8. Move From Compliance to Culture
Ultimately, creating a culture of service excellence is not about checking boxes. It is about building a shared sense of ownership, pride, and continuous improvement.
Service excellence is not a destination — it is a culture, built one decision, one conversation, and one act of care at a time.
Next Steps for Leaders
Service excellence is not a one-off initiative, it is an ongoing journey. By embedding it in your district’s DNA, we create schools and systems where everyone — students, families, and staff — can thrive.
As you plan for the coming school year, be sure to:
– Engage your teams in developing standards of excellence.
– Make feedback a regular, actionable part of your routines.
– Protect instructional leadership by clarifying priorities and training support staff.
– Reinforce service behaviors through recognition and continuous support.
– Build onboarding systems that help every employee start strong and stay engaged.
Studer Education helps K-12 leaders build cultures of service excellence in their school districts through personalized, results-focused support. Learn more about leadership coaching.