Category: Cellular


Just because the bar is set extremely low in your industry doesn’t mean that you shouldn’t strive for optimal customer satisfaction.  I’m currently with Sprint right now, I left Verizon back in 2010 because I was sick and tired of the poor customer service that they were providing me with.  With Verizon it was more about hidden extra fees than anything else, in fact, this is something that I have continued to experience up through 2015 on my tablet’s data plan.  With Sprint I don’t expect better customer service but at least I’m not paying as much to where I would expect it.

Still, if you follow my twitter feed you’ll see that, there’s no end to my frustrations with trying to accomplish the simplest things.  They recently resolved my last issue but it took a full week to figure out exactly what went wrong and talk to the right people.  A truly satisfied customer is an evangelist, a soldier, a brand representative. This is someone who will represent you and even convince others to give you a second chance.  I’m really not talking about doing anything different here other than following through on set expectations.  That’s why it’s so hard… You’ve got to actually follow through on what you tell others you can accomplish.

Still sometimes it’s hard to get that part perfect every time.  That’s why you should remember to do a few key things.  The first is follow up.  Call your customers and ask about their experience.  Ask key questions like “How can we improve our process for you?” and “Is there anything you didn’t like?” Documentation is key. Document the reasons people chose not to go with your service and try to find out what would change their mind in the future. This last thing is simple but more and more difficult these days: be available.  You are going to have customers contact you who aren’t happy.  Don’t make it difficult to solve their problems. Have a person or system that allows someone to be available for their phone calls with the power to help. 80% of my customer service frustrations with these phone companies could usually be resolved by 1 person in 3 minutes accessing something that I can’t.  Which would you rather have? The 3 minute conversation or the 2 hour long one after I’ve been hung up on and transferred around for 4 days straight?

I have had a lot of interactions with customer service lately.  Some of it I pursue aggressively to actually get to a resolution but for the most part I think I am just looking for answers.

The bottom line with any form of complaint is transparency.  When you are in a sales situation being transparent with your process builds value.  An example of that is what the membership sales staff at LA | Fitness would walk their prospects through on the tour.  “This machine has Kevlar belts on it to ensure the smoothest operation possible and prevent any interruptions to your workout schedule day after day because it’s more durable than the alternatives.” You don’t need to be an almanac of knowledge but it is really good to know some of the things about the product you are representing to make the sale.  When you field a complaint to customer service it should really operate the same way.

Even if the result is the same you can improve your customers’ perception of you by building value in the offer of resolution.  “So just to let you know, the reason we charge so much for roaming services in Canada is because we have to strike agreements with Tel-West and they charge us an arm and a leg for every MB we don’t prepay for.  That’s why as soon as we detect you’ve entered the area we send you a notification where you can opt-in to our travel plan where we pre-pay for your service.”  Go deeper, explain the process, this can also help you refine your service standards.  Is the notification sent to the travelling phone or just the account holders?  Was it sent by text? Email? Maybe there is a better way? Explaining this process will allow you to even make corrections for the future.  What if you are notifying an email the customer no longer checks?  Or communicating with an employee who no longer works for your clients company?

Build value in the process, you and your customer will both appreciate identifying where the error occurred and this makes you partners in it’s resolution.

Cheap Service?

Customer service typically comes as a premium feature.

I argue it is one of the most basic needs and the foundation of any business.

Why should the customer service I get with a $70/m cellphone bill with sprint be any worse (and it is)  Than when it was $100/m with Verizon Wireless?

difference in network, infrastructure, cost, frequency, coverage are all things i can accept for price differences.  The ability for someone to say I’m sorry we messed up and we still want your business is not an acceptable difference for the dollar.

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