Stop Trying To Delight Your Customers

April 27th, 2011 | Posted in Sales and Customer Service | Comments Off on Stop Trying To Delight Your Customers

Recently The New York Times implemented a digital subscription policy and began charging for access to NYTimes.com.  But as a home delivery subscriber I’m entitled to unlimited access on my phone and computer.

So I wasn’t too concerned when I was on a business trip and reached the monthly limit of 20 free downloads.  The pay wall I encountered on my phone gave me an opportunity to log in as a home subscriber.  When I did, I received a cheery message: Your Benefits Have Been Activated!  And I was invited to return to the article I was attempting to download.

But when I tried to reach the article, I was sent to the pay wall.  So I logged in as a home subscriber.  I was delighted to see that Your Benefits Have Been Activated!  And I was invited to return to the article and . . . was sent to the pay wall.

Two weeks, four phone calls and more than an hour of my time later, the problem has been resolved.  (And here’s a special thank you to Resolution Specialist Oneka at extension 4718!)

But my recent experience with The Times was on my mind as I was reading the article Stop Trying to Delight Your Customers by Matthew Dixon, Karen Freeman, and Nicholas Toman (Harvard Business Review July-August, 2010).  Their Idea in Brief:

Conventional wisdom holds that to increase loyalty, companies must “delight” customers by exceeding expectations.  A large-scale study of contact-center and self-service interactions, however, finds that what customers really want (but rarely get) is just a satisfactory solution to their service issue.

As part of their study, the authors evaluated the power of three metrics to predict customer loyalty.

  • To the surprise of no one, Customer Satisfaction (CSAT) once again proved to be a poor indicator of loyalty.
  • Net Promoter Score (NPS) was a more accurate predictor of loyalty.
  • But the most accurate metric was Customer Effort Score (CES).  This measurement is determined by asking just one question: “How much effort did you personally have to put forth to handle your request?”

In my recent interactions, The New York Times performed rather poorly on this CES measure.  I recall my frustration when the third representative I spoke with returned to the line after one of numerous holds and said: “Thank you for patiently holding.”  “Please don’t thank me for my patience,” I said somewhat tensely.  “I’m rapidly losing my patience.  Please fix the problem.”

So here are five tips to make it easier for customers to solve their problems quickly and easily:

  1. Don’t just resolve the current issue – head off the next one.
  2. Arm reps to address the emotional side of customer interactions.
  3. Minimize channel switching by increasing self-service channel “stickiness.”
  4. Use feedback from disgruntled or struggling customers to reduce customer effort.
  5. Empower the front-line to deliver a low-effort experience.

What is your organization doing to make it easier for your customers to do business with you?

Reprints of the article and a download of the Customer Contact Council® Effort Audit tool are available from the Customer Executive Board. Click here to read.

 

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