Its Not The Degree Of Difficulty; Its The Attitude
Maria, at Customers Are Always, blogs about a nightmare encounter she had with an AT&T rep that couldnt solve her problem involving a wireless Internet connection.
Prior to the creation of the Internet, the conventional wisdom said that an upset customer would tell 25 people. Today that person can tell 250 or 2500, or 25,000 with one click of a mouse whether its a blog, Facebook page, or discussion forum. Maria, with her blog post has just proved that.
AT&T failed miserably in meeting Marias needs. No matter how big or small your company is, do you have a complaint resolution process that, at the minimum, meets your customers needs? Is it part of your culture to tell your customer service staff to go to extra lengths to help the customer?
Last week I was forwarded a complaint from a constituent of ours who is both a volunteer and a donor. She was upset about an e-mail that had been sent to her and she had misinterpreted it. She also mentioned she had a problem. Her tone was (warning: understatement ahead) rather sarcastic. I could have ignored her e-mail or delegated it to someone else. But I responded in a friendly tone explaining to her how we could fix her problem. A few hours later, she replied in a friendly way and asked me to ignore her earlier tone.
The entire interaction took about five minutes of my time. Im sure I retained her as a volunteer and donor. Now her problem was a great deal less challenging than Marias problem, but even if it had been a lot more challenging, I wouldnt have given up on her.
Remember, most experts tell us that its 3-5 times more expensive to acquire a customer than it is to retain one.
In solving customers problems its often not the degree of difficulty; its the difference in attitude.
Hows the attitude in your business?
Regards,
Glenn