Archive for the ‘Customer Service’ Category

Whar Can Netflix Teach Government Shared Services About Customer Service?

J. Short - Friday, 28 October 2011 02:05

Organizations that excel at customer service listen and take note. They benchmark and apply the best practices and processes to their organization. They also learn from mistakes – both their own and others. To this end there is a lot government shared services can learn about customer service from Netflix.

Some background. Netflix is a streaming video and dvd by mail service. It was a favorite of investors, customers and Wall Street since start up in 2007.  Its subscriber base went up quarter after quarter along with stock price and revenue. It pioneered the dvd by mail service that knocked Blockbuster out of the box and was one of the first companies to deliver movies via the internet. Investors loved it, customers, myself included, even more so. That is until July of this year. In July Netflix announced they were raising the cost of a combined dvd and streaming video subscription by 60%!  The reason: customers were relying too heavily on the dvd by mail service (the least profitable method for delivering content) and not enough on streaming video (the most profitable method of delivering contemt).  The price of a share of Netflix dropped 61% in 3 months as 800,00 customers left the company in the 4th quarter.

In September about the time the higher rate went into effect Netflix announced they were separating its streaming video service from its dvd by mail services with separate web sites and separate bills. Customers would search for content on one site and, failing to find it, log in and search for the same content on the other site. More customers left.  It was no urprise that when Netflix released its 4th quarter earnings statement it was worse than the most pessimistic analyst projections. Netflix stock dropped another 26%.  The company had lost 75% of its market value in just 3 months.

What can Netflix teach shared services about customer service?

1
Don’t blame the customer. Netflix said customers’  stubborn insistence on clinging to the outdated dvd format was the problem. In fact, I ordered dvds by mail when the content I wanted was not available for streaming. Having framed the issue incorrectly (customer preference vs the unavailability of streaming content} the solution was incorrect. Ask the wrong question and you get the wrong answer every time.

2

Don’t treat your customers like captives. In raising rates 60%, Netflix forgot that their customers had choices. A lot more now than in 2007. Treat your customers like they have a choice even if you don’t think they do. You could be wrong.

3

Service recovery is important. How you recover from a service failure can be as bad as the failure itself. To add insult to injury, Netflix followed up the announcement of a 60% rate hike with an announcement of their intent to separate its streaming video service from its dvd by mail service.  Normally this would mean absolutely nothing to customers except Netflix added that they were creating a separate web site for customers to manage their dvd subscription and customers would be billed separately for dvds.  At a time when all their energy should have been focused on recovery they announced their intent to inflict more damage.

4

Put yourself in your customer’s shoes or go barefoot. Apparently the executive suite at Netflix did not consider how onerous it would be for customers to manage two different accounts, use two different web sites and pay two different bills if they wanted to keep both services, They could not have. By making it harder to keep both services the company guaranteed a large number of customers would drop one or both,

5

Some humility is in order. Netflix aborted its plan to separate dvds from streaming video but the price increase stands. To the ground swell of complaints, wave of disgusted customers and 800,000 former customers Netflix had only this to say: we won’t even try to woo back the customers we lost by increasing subscriptions by 60% and our botched plan to subject the remaining customers to the laboriousness of managing two separate accounts. Our decisions were right but our timing was off. In other words, we should have waited awhile longer before announcing our second idiocy.

6

The climb to the top may have been too long but the fall to the bottom is always too short.


Moving the Needle on Government Customer Service – Part 3

GSS - Tuesday, 18 October 2011 06:51

In Part 1 of Moving the Needle on Government Customer Service I talked about the state of customer service in government and compared customer service in industry and in government. In Part 2 I talked about the impact of government’s haphazard approach to customer service on employees, organizations and the public. In this third and last post on the subject I cover why government customer service as a whole lags behind industry and what to do to move the needle.

What’s wrong?

1
Government has been slow setting up call centers. Do not confuse a receptionist who answers the phone and routes calls with a contact center. Businesses know intuitively that product and service go hand in hand. A good product but poor customer service will have the same affect over time as selling a lousy product. To businesses customer service is part of the product life cycle. To government customer service is an add-on, a necessary evil.

2
Government employees are not trained in customer service. This doesn’t mean that government employees receive no training in customer service. Rather since customer service is not a job in and of itself, the training is general in nature. Contrast the customer service training the HR specialist who also answers customer calls in government gets with the customer service training that a customer service representative who also handles HR calls in industry gets.


Moving the Needle on Government Customer Service

GSS - Thursday, 1 September 2011 05:24

The is part 1 of a 3 part post on moving the needle on customer service in government.

You cannot talk about efficiency in government without talking about customer service. You cannot do customer service well without the tools, strategy and training needed to manage relationships with your customer. Customer service means managing your interactions with recipients of your services. We have all heard a fair number of horror stories about government customer service and have probably contributed a few ouirselves. Bashing government customer service is almost a national pastime. The public’s perception is that the customer service you get from government is not as good as the service you get from the private sector. Generally this is true but not because government employees are not as dedicated or hard working as employees in the private sector.


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How importance is a service recovery plan? Ask Sony.

admin - Tuesday, 10 May 2011 12:52

How important is a service recovery plan? Ask Sony.

On April 28, I got an email from Sony telling me that the Playstation Network had been hacked and that my personal information along with that of thousands if not millions of other Playstation Network subscribers had been compromised. The email read in part:


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Customer Service in Government Shared Services Organizations

GSS - Wednesday, 20 April 2011 01:42

To grasp the importance of customer interfaces you must first broaden your thinking to take in all the ways that a shared services organization interfaces with the consumers of its services. Every one of these points of interaction are interfaces. An intuitive customer interface speaks to the ease and value, from the customer’s viewpoint of course, of that interaction.


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