Wednesday, August 05, 2009

Customer Disservice

It’s increasingly becoming fashionable for marketers and marketing students to talk about customer service. If you were to sit in any of the hundreds of boardrooms across this country or if you were to attend a marketing class in any of the thousands of B-schools that dot this nation, you can’t help but think there is an overriding obsession with customer service among the past, present and potential marketers of India.

Is it true? Are we obsessed with customer service?

We are not even close. When it comes to customer service, we are light years away. We are probably better than we were during the socialist era of the past but we still have miles to travel.

Let me list two examples here. These are not run-of-the-mill brands that I am talking about. These are India’s most respected. If this is what the best of India has to offer when it comes to customer service, you can work out the math yourself about others.

These examples are not figments of somebody’s imagination. They are as experienced by yours truly!

Tata Sky: If you were to add a new package to your existing list of channels, all you have to do is just SMS from your registered mobile to Tata Sky customer care centre. A piece of cake you say. But wait till you wish to drop the same package and you would realize the shenanigans of Tata Sky. Nah, you can’t just SMS, you have to call only. It would take an eternity to reach a customer care representative. And till you reach that abominable snowman, the Mr. Big foot, be prepared to listen to hours of bilingual barrage promoting Tata Sky’s scintillating subscription packages and promotions.

HDFC Bank: Okay, you need a loan; all of us do and there are these modern and magnificently customer-oriented private banks that would come running if you care to just lift the phone and call. A representative would come home, assist you in filling the forms, help you with paperwork and have your demand draft delivered in less than 48 hours flat. Great, isn’t it? Only till you wish to prepay the loan. Try calling him and he would only ask you to visit their regional office that could be across the town, if you are lucky or could well be in another city. Travel there and your travails have just begun. You might have to wait in queue for hours, if not days. And the best part is when you ask the teller after repaying your loan what happens to your post-dated cheques that you had submitted. With as much expression as a corpse you would find him or her say, “Some post-dated cheques might still be presented for payment, and if it happens do go and talk to the concerned branch.” And before you try reasoning with the teller you would find him/her say, “Speak to the enquiry counter, not here; next. “

Before I sign off, I would like to share with you what I read long ago about a department store in Michigan U.S. Apparently the store has a plaque right at the entrance of the store that serves as directions to its employees and as an advisory to its customers. Here is what the plaque says:

Marketing Rules Here:

Rule No.1: The customer is always right.

Rule No.2: If you think the customer is wrong, read Rule No.1

9 comments:

Suresh Muthukrishnan said...

Great post sir...... true words from your heart..... you are right, most of the companies has to concentrate little bit.....sorry not little bit, it is entirly......

Anonymous said...

You are back Sir!!!with your awesome posts..Perhaps this is what the anonymous meant through his comments in your previous post. Keep writing..frequently!

Unknown said...

But do you also realise there is something called ARPU..once again if you went to a B school..guess you would know. Dropping of packages is something a company does not want..e.g. a X organisation wants month on month customer spends to increase. Yes to drop a package which I have exprienced too requires a call so that the same X company can understand your consumer behaviour and probably study why a customer chooses to drop a package once he has subscribed to it. This is all a part of running a business I reckon. We cannot pick out one incident, one event, one story and say that the company is not customer focussed.

And btw the phrase - The customer is always right is by David Ogilvy :)

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SatheeshKrishnamurthy said...

Simran, When you drop a package, Tata Sky does not ask you why. So what consumer behaviour or they trying to figure out by making you call. They just want to make it difficult for you to drop a package. And is it just one incident? The fact that there are others vouching for what I said proves everyone has had a problem when it comes to customer service - the very point I was trying to make. I give a damn about ARPU or other such nonsense. My point was about customer service or the lack of it. Read things carefully before you jump with nonsensical sarcasm.

Vetri said...

Out of 2 examples you portrayed, i had fallen once into such trap and crap before. Good post JI...

liliandavid said...

I just realised how good customer service is. It took more than a week for Airtel to upgrade my broadband plan. I meant 'upgrade' from 256k to 512k. If that's the amount of time they took for an upgradation, think about switching to an economy plan . . . .

Vijay.Gummadi said...

Marketing Rules Here:

Rule No.1: The customer is always right.

Rule No.2: If you think the customer is wrong, read Rule No.1

the would help us for sure.....

Anonymous said...

Hi,

Read a similar Monster bank story on another blog. Am just posting the link of that blog:
http://voiceagainstbanks.blogspot.com/