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While the Iron is Hot
Wake up T-mobile and everyone else out there, customers are the KEY to your business treat them like GOLD not like a number!
Thanks for the post, you definitely got my blood boiling this morning. :-)
Would they entrust sales or marketing to a mechanized phone system? Don't think so.
On the one hand, the marketing department will spend millions in advertising to reach customers and try to incite some response (Action, purchase, etc.) and they are thrilled with 2% response rates. But then when a customer self-selects and actually calls the company (with a specific need), the customer gets the message that they really don't want to speak with you.
I had a similar experience with my digital TV satellite provider. I'll go anywhere to find answers except calling them because it is so painful.
Someone has switched the price tags!
Was online returning a defective kitchen appliance and the person in front of me brought back a cooked piece of meat they'd bought a few days earlier and asked for their money back because it didn't taste good.
The customer service rep happily accommodated them. I was so blown away, I asked the woman if extreme requests like that were unusual and she said they happened all the time and they honored pretty much every one.
Interesting approach.
I'm not kidding. Some IVR units now are programmed to recognize voice stress and a few other factors, and if they detect stress, transfer you to an operator.
But this is true to almost every single mobile phone company and internet provider.
@George - you and Marcel made a similar point, and I agree with it.
@Marcel - absolutely on track. A company needs marketing, but what's the spend? Is it 60/40? Is it 70/30? When thinking about it from a strategy standpoint, or even just allotments, if you don't acquire, you don't grow. If you don't preserve the base, you can't pull in revenue. Hmm.
CEO types, what's your take?
Not to mention, they have the most accurate voice recognition system I've encountered yet...at any time all you have to do is say "Let me talk to someone" (or something along those lines) and you will get transfered almost immediately.
So while I agree that many companies need to shift their customer experiences to a more positive realm, I think you are way off base on T-Mobile's service.
Unfortunately, that corp got acquired and it all went away. And they put the live support staff on time limits to be cost effective. So that when you do get a live person it's a situation of Angry customer, meet stressed out Support staff. Not a formula for success on any consistent level.
Under full disclosure, I work for Jaduka, a telecom-related company. So, I understand why a company wouldn't want to publish their corporate phone directory online. But, I've always thought a great customer service solution would be to list specific customer service functions by the most commonly requested help or FAQs and then provide a privacy-protected call link, like Jaduka's Click-and-Connect or dukaLINK to the right specialist.
Similar to GetHuman or NoPhoneTrees.com, but the company would never have to list the specialists number and could use automated call routing to find an available agent on the back-end. The customer is still having to self-select the right person to speak with, but its done in a much better interface for the task - a freeflowing Webpage versus a serial audio phone tree.
@Bill that sounds like it's headed in the right direction... yay!
And Chris, as we say in Quaker Meeting sometimes, "That Friend speaks my mind."
They are one of the worst.
On the other side, Bank Of America is ALWAYS a chore and it takes forever just to get a response from their website. I cringe when I have a problem with them.
While there are several companies I could point out, I would have to say Whirlpool takes the award for worst customer service in my book. Long story short - not functioning refrigerator under warranty for full replacement. During my 3 week ordeal (that's right three weeks without a refrig during summer no less) I was transferred around to countless departments and always heard different answers. Seemed the common thread in all those who I talked to through - I am right and you aren't. Seems the old adage of "customer is always right" has gone out the window! Needless to say, there won't be another Whirlpool appliance in my future.
I call the kind of approach you're talking about Clockwork Orange Marketing (Youtube has clips of what I'm talking about). I'd really love to spread the Clockwork Orange Marketing (COM) meme. It'd be great to mark companies with bad customer service with the COM badge all over the web.
Clockwork Orange Marketing: let's stop the torture!