Understanding PCI DSS and Payment Card Security

0 Comments

Consumer Reports July 2011 edition tells us that "Sixty-four percent of respondents said that during the previous 12 months they had left a store because service was poor, and 67 percent had hung up on customer service without having had their problem addressed." They also report that "65 percent felt 'tremendously annoyed' about rude salespeople. And 56 percent felt that way about having to take multiple phone steps to reach the right place."

What's happening is that in an effort to produce ever greater returns for shareholders, companies have shifted too much of the service burden to their customers without regard for how much it costs them. That cost consists of time, money, and emotional energy. Customers (that's you and me) aren't standing for it any longer. They're vocalizing their discontent using social media, telling negative stories to their friends, and voting with their feet-deciding not to repatriate businesses that they feel aren't treating them right.

That's costing businesses billions. But they can't measure it because they don't pay attention to customer cost and effort. If these measures were part of the design and decisioning processes, it would be simple to calculate a practical balance between company expense and customer cost. When customers walk out on the companies that serve them, those brands lose more than immediate sales, they lose referrals and follow-on sales (a.k.a. lifetime value of a customer). When customers walk, it also costs companies additional service dollars: additional advertising to replace lost customers, online reputation monitoring software to spot bad incidents before they go viral, and additional customer service expenses to deal with those customer who stay and fight for what they want.

Companies should do three things to stop the vicious cycle of cost-cutting to keep profits up:

  1. Start measuring customer cost (in dollars, time, and emotional energy) and use that information in service design
  2. Make service design a real position with proper support instead of an ad-hoc committee undertaking
  3. Focus on the interface between the customer and employee experiences to create processes that are easy for everyone

In my opinion, the best service designs are the ones that give everyone more of what they want. Great services (and processes) are introduced on purpose and by design to be easy to use, low-cost, low-effort, and effective not just for the business but for the customer at the same time.

The source of this thinking stream is an article published in the Harvard Business Review entitled "Stop Trying to Delight Your Customers" and the corresponding consulting methodology published by the Corporate Executive Board. You can read the details here.

Related Content

Reader Comments

Add a Comment

We welcome your thoughtful comments. All comments will display your real name.

Want to participate in the discussion?

Or log in for complete access.

  • Clear
  • Post
Be the first to post a comment for this story.
Products & Services

Olea Tuscon Kiosk

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/4330.png

4330/Olea-Tuscon-Kiosk

NCR SelfServ™ 70

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/4928.png

4928/NCR-SelfServ-70

Labor Analytics

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/1863.png

1863/Labor-Analytics

Self-Service Kiosk

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/selfservice_kiosk_100.gif

144/Self-Service-Kiosk

Olea Metro 22 Kiosk

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/4325.png

4325/Olea-Metro-22-Kiosk

Unattended Payment Solution

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/sagem_unattended_payment.gif

898/Unattended-Payment-Solution

Black Box MediaCento™ RF Extenders for Digital Content over Coax

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/3189.png

3189/Black-Box-MediaCento-RF-Extenders-for-Digital-Content-over-Coax

DisplayPoint

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/4155.png

4155/DisplayPoint

Queue Management System

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/4785.png

4785/Queue-Management-System

Olea Soho Kiosk

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/4328.png

4328/Olea-Soho-Kiosk

Customer Experience Architect

Latest posts by Mike Wittenstein
Mike Wittenstein
Mike Wittenstein helps his clients beat their competitors by differentiating their brands with memorable and profitable customer experiences. As an interactive agency leader, e-Visionary at IBM, interim CXO, and now as a speaker, Mike has guided hundreds of companies to adjust their front-line experience for bottom-line results. He is the go-to guy on aligning management, marketing, people, and technology to deliver great customer and employee experiences.
Retail Customer Experience Executive Summit
Request Information From Suppliers
Save time looking for suppliers. Complete this form to submit a Request for Information to our entire network of partners.