Tag Archives: NetPromoter

3 Ways to Cheat Customers (and Get Away with It)

When seeking ways to cut costs from your business the easiest way is to short-change your customers.  After all, you can’t really skimp on creating the product, because if you did no one would buy it to begin with.  But once you have your customers’ money, there’s no easier way to increase profitability than to limit customer service expenditures.  Support costs too high?  No problem:

  • Outsource – There are loads of up-and-coming markets where laborers are willing (grateful even) to work for 50% the wages.
  • Decrease support hours – If you can’t find cheaper labor, have your team work fewer hours, or days.  (See article: USPS reducing number of delivery days.)
  • Fire your qualified representatives and replace them with unqualified service representatives – Not as obvious as other options, this one guarantees that your internal metrics like ASA (average speed of answer) remain pristine while you cut costs.

April Fool’s! (Did I “trick” you?)  If you’ve read any of my previous posts, you know that I do NOT endorse this approachCutting costs is not the same as saving money.  Yet companies quite often resort to twisted logic like this when they seek ways to boost bottom line performance.

Is there a way to improve bottom line performance while outsourcing, for example?  Definitely.  The key is to keep the customer experience in mind.  Outsourcing itself isn’t bad.  The company to which you outsource service must understand your goals and must have incentives when they perform and penalties if they don’t.  If one service goal is to pick up calls quickly, it makes sense to track ASA.  But if your goal is customer satisfaction, measuring NetPromoter scores makes more sense.  (Ideally, your company has already identified how strongly ASA and customer satisfaction are related.)

Are there legitimate ways to cut costs in the methods above?  Absolutely but only if your company keeps customer needs foremost in their minds.  Otherwise, expect heavy losses in customer trust, loyalty, and business.  And expect customers to be [negatively] vocal about your products and services.

The pivot point(s): (1) cheating customers eventually harms the enterprise and (2) the key to implementing cost-cutting measures is to continue to deliver a quality customer experience.

April Fool’s aside, which companies have you worked with who were willing to cheat customers out of their hard-earned money to satisfy their demand for short-term profitability?

Using Your Superpower Responsibly – Common Sense

Sometimes customer service can be very difficult to deliver.  However, more and more I am convinced that the problems originate from failure to observe the maxim: failure to plan is planning to fail.  When these cases arise, customer service problems stick out like sore thumbs.  To spot them, you only need the superpowers of common sense.  Here’s a recent illustration of an interaction my wife had with Shutterfly, Inc.

  • Upload photos.  Save draft project.
  • Receive email with $10 promotional coupon.

So far so good.  Shutterfly “knows” my wife is interested in their product and knows that she didn’t make a purchase on her first visit, so “interacts” with her via email to entice her to make the purchase.

  • Finish project.  Place order, attempt to redeem coupon.
  • Coupon redemption fails.
  • Shutterfly customer service doesn’t know which promotion my wife is referring to and asks her to send an email (no attachments please since Customer Service can’t view attachments) with details.
  • Details exchanged.
  • Company is sorry coupon doesn’t work.
  • Company’s verbatim response:  “I request you to get back to me once your ships and you have received the shipment confirmation email. I will insert a gift certificate worth of $10 to your account for $10 off.  Gift Certificates do not expire and it can be used to purchase any Shutterfly product from your account.”

Now, using your superpowers of common sense, what Customer Service sins has Shutterfly committed?

  1. Checkout step did not accept the promotional code.
  2. Customer Service Team unaware of current sales/marketing promotions.
  3. Customer Service Team has insufficient tools to interact with customers on their terms.
  4. Service response did not yield desired result on order ($10 discount).

This experience begs two questions.  Is the company inept?  Or do they value their customers so little that they don’t bother to create a working coupon redemption transaction?  Regardless of the answer, the problems my wife encountered, along with the poor way the problem was handled leave a bad impression.  (If you are a NetPromoter proponent you will recognize me as a “detractor”.)  The pivot point is that if your company fails to use its common sense superpower, your customers will find better alternatives – faster than a speeding bullet.  In the next post we’ll propose recommended recovery steps!

Any “promoters” out there to balance the view?