It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, … it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us.
Charles Dickens
A Tale of Two Cities
These words opened Charles Dickens’s classic book A Tale of Two Cities, written 150 years ago. The passage was Dickens’s elegant attempt to describe the late 1700s as the bridge between two eras; the era of the farm was transitioning to the era of the factory. That transition saw great upheaval, including several major revolutionary wars; it was also a period of extensive invention and discovery. If Dickens were here today he might use similar words to describe the present time—as a bridge between the period of technology and the era of the customer.
Whether or not you accept the hyperbole of an emerging revolution, there is no doubt customers today are significantly different than those of just a few years ago. Then, we were easily wooed by the new restaurant with the cool sign or catchy brand name. Then, a call center that quickly answered the phone got high marks, even if the rep had an attitude, or simply couldn’t answer our question and transferred us from Patty to Paul to pillar to post. Then, we excused indifferent service on the grounds that someone was having a bad day, but gave little thought to voicing our displeasure or abandoning the service provider.
Who was then best known for excellent service? Nordstrom! The upscale department store was staffed by friendly people willing, for instance, to accompany us to other departments in the store, and in all ways to provide customized service—something practically every gas station attendant on the planet did for our grandparents. At that time, service had to be really awful for us to walk away. Brands were important to us and we stuck with them for a lifetime. Our fathers bought the same brand of automobile every three years for their entire lives.
Those days are completely gone. Welcome to the turbulent times of the “new normal” customer—restless, cautious, powerful, and potentially dangerous.
The landscape of customer service has been re-contoured. Today’s customers are not at all the way they used to be 20 years ago. What has caused customers to be so different today? First, customers get terrific service from some organizations and use those experiences to judge everyone else. When the UPS or FedEx delivery person walks to our front door with a sense of urgency, we expect the mail carrier to do likewise. When the Disney associate treats us as a special guest, we assume every other frontline service person will be as friendly. We look at every e-tailer through Amazon.com and Zappos.com eyes. We compare every great service experience to every other service experience.
Customers also have far more choices than ever before. Go to the grocery store for a loaf of bread and you are confronted with 16 brands and 23 varieties packaged 12 different ways. Three decades ago sliced bread came one way—white—and was probably produced by either Wonder or Sunbeam. Today, product choices proliferate and have fewer apparent differences, so customers are forced to use the quality of their purchase experience surrounding the product as their primary means for discernment and decision making. How much is Hertz really different from Avis or Budget? Marriott from Hyatt or Hilton? FedEx from UPS?
Today’s customers are much smarter buyers than their parents were. The Internet has become a potent source of real-time education. According to research reported by New York Times Pulitzer Prize—winning reporter Matt Richtel, people consume an average of 12 hours of media a day (when an hour spent with the Internet and TV simultaneously counts as two hours). That compares with five hours in 1960.1
The Internet is a tool for instant assessment. Considering Sleepwell Hotel for your next vacation trip? You can instantly get web-based information complete with evaluations from forty-eleven previous guests. We are our own Consumer Reports. Watchdog websites can give you the lowdown on why Joe’s Pretty Good Car Repair is better than Otto’s Auto.
Recent data from Society for New Communications Research shows that 84 percent of customers consider the quality of a provider’s customer service when deciding whether to do business with the company.2 This means companies must monitor all the details of their customer service—now very transparent to customers—and provide super-early warning on emerging glitches. It means creating customer conversations that promote insight and foster trust. It also means never forgetting that, armed with deep knowledge from a myriad of sources, customers are more empowered and emboldened to “balk and walk.” The organization that hangs their reputation on a solid brand or on the reach and influence of carefully crafted PR is, as they say in the South where we live, “just asking for a whuppin’!”
A merchant of yesteryear, placed on truth serum, might have described customers as a bit gullible, very nice, conflict-averse, easily influenced by advertising, not particularly savvy, and willing to accept average quality. No more. Today’s labels would not be so meek and mild. In fact, a contemporary merchant would no doubt acknowledge the power and influence customers now wield.
Today, the customer really is king. Enabled and equipped by the Internet, with its capacity to instantly reach a gazillion fellow customers with the click of a mouse, customers can bring any service provider to its knees. The new normal customer, with this newfound strength, is no more the small and subservient victim of the stereotypically colossal and greedy corporation of yesteryear. The tables of the customer relationship have been turned. Plentiful product and service information has created a more mature customer. Customers today are wired and dangerous.
The French Revolution was triggered by a series of events that led to the storming of the Bastille to release long-held political prisoners. Only the common people were paying taxes; nobles and clergy were exempt. The price of France’s participation in the American Revolution had taken a heavy financial toll. Then, King Louis XVI helped bankrupt the French government by spending lavishly on his court at Versailles. In response, the French government attempted to squeeze even more revenue from already cash-strapped citizens.
Meanwhile, the writings of Enlightenment thinkers like Voltaire and Rousseau, which focused on the worth of all people, were gaining popularity. As French soldiers who fought in the American Revolution returned to France, they brought with them incendiary stories of the fight for liberty and equality. These smoldering ideas required little more to spark revolt. When Queen Marie Antoinette was told that the common people were without bread, she supposedly remarked “Let them eat cake!” Rumor of her haughty insensitivity spread through the streets, inciting even peace-loving citizens to take up arms.
What does this French history lesson tell us? For anyone with a customer: signs of change can emerge unexpectedly. Alarm bells are ringing for us. Customers who have more choices and more smarts, and who have experienced great service from some, now expect the same standards from everyone. The bar has been raised.
As with the French Revolution, the root causes of our changing consumer expectations have existed for a long time. Responding to the superficial signs of change can be tactically helpful. It is what most organizations have done. But, addressing what is underneath is the secret strategy that will spark continuing customer loyalty in this new business environment. It is the path to increased profits and growth.
After musician Dave Carroll learned from fellow passengers that United Airlines baggage handlers were damaging his guitar on the Chicago O’Hare tarmac, he was unable to find anyone at United willing to make the situation right, so he made a music video about his woes. He posted the video on YouTube, chronicling in humorous detail United’s failure to provide appropriate service and their limp approach to repairing or reconciling the situation. This negative view of the United brand has been viewed by well over 9 million people! The juicy cyber battle has been cited endlessly as an example of what not to do both in the media and in print. According to a blog written by The Economist and posted on July 24, 2009, the Dave Carroll incident cost United Airlines 10 percent of share value, or about $180 million!3
The impact on United is not surprising in a world where, according to recent Convergys research, social media has five times the impact of traditional word of mouth. Think of social media as word of mouth on steroids. The average post is read by 45 people, and 62 percent of customers who hear about a bad experience on social media stop doing business with, or avoid doing business with, the offending company.4
Only a few years ago Dave would have had to work his way through the United bureaucracy, and would most likely only have been able to spread the word of his frustration by telling his story to friends and family members. Perhaps he would have found a “consumer advocate” willing to tell his story on radio or television, which may have brought enough leverage to goad United into action. Not today! Dave rebelled and brought his story graphically in a music video to the power of the Internet and word of his situation spread at warp speed.
Now, for the really scary part. Although Dave’s damaged-guitar troubles happened in the spring of 2008 and his first video went on YouTube in July 2009, his video continues to harm the United brand as it hangs around cyberspace. Unlike word of mouth, which fades as other events crowd it out of memory, word of mouse missives remain out there like a tribal story repeated down the generations.
Attacks on a brand through customer blogs, Yelp-like reviews, social media, and YouTube-like messages dangerous to a brand cannot be cured by a booster shot of good will. They become a chronic disease that weakens a reputation, even if they are without merit. If United Airlines had quickly apologized and involved Dave in crafting the best restitution (maybe two first-class tickets to Disney World plus repairing or replacing his Taylor guitar), and communicated the changes implemented based on their learnings, the Internet pedestrian might have never known about the United fiasco. United’s experience with Dave Carroll suggests the wisdom of nipping in the bud anything that could rapidly become a PR nightmare.
Technology has made today’s customers powerful and potentially dangerous. While CEOs and CFOs focus on stock prices and raising capital, customers zero in on getting fair value—and that now includes a positive service experience. Today’s customers have the capacity to bring down popular brands, squeeze corporate balance sheets, and send stock prices plummeting.
Once upon a time, captains of industry worried about the fallout from failed products (Ford Explorer, Tylenol, Toyota); now they must worry about the downside of failed service (JetBlue, AOL, United). The implications of failed service present a much bigger challenge. Think about it this way: organizations determine the quality of the products they put out in the marketplace, but customers determine the lion’s share of whether their service has quality. Riding herd on what happens in the factory is a lot more predictable and controllable than getting customers to do what is expected on their side of the service equation.
Industry captains who have been surprised by the tone, mindset, and muscle of today’s customers are misunderstanding the real meaning of service. Using product thinking, with its emphasis on quality control and backroom domination, they put the spotlight on the service outcome—not on the service experience. “What do you mean, customers are upset by their banking experience? Our statements are accurate and our tellers are efficient!” “How could passengers be upset? We got them to their destination safely, on time, and with their luggage!” They see a good outcome but are not assessing the customer experience. Both outcome and experience are important to the customer. But often the outcome is, to the customer, simply a table stake—the givens of the service provided and not what distinguishes it.
McDonald’s is an excellent hamburger factory, one of the best in the world. McDonald’s CEO can no doubt tell you the average speed of service per car at 12:32 p.m., the precise amount of time required to make a Big Mac, the pace of a credit-card transaction versus cash—essentially, the arithmetic of the service encounter. These are all metrics almost completely controllable by McDonald’s. But the customer is evaluating their trip to Mickey D’s based on the personality of the server, the hospitality of the setting, and the respect they are shown throughout the entire process. These are metrics co-created by McDonald’s and the customer. McDonald’s controls their presentation, but the customer determines if the entire experience made the grade.
When organizations rely on professional shoppers to assess the experience of the customer rather than asking the customer directly, they reveal their product-making mentality. Shoppers are actors trained to watch for adherence to standards, much like the quality-control department does in a factory. Real customers have a broader view, a memory-making perspective that considers both outcome and experience.
John has five children. Ask John’s wife what is more important: the speed with which the order was filled, the expected level of food preparation, or the welcoming attitude of the server. She will tell you that style is more important than speed in determining whether she returns! Sure, the basic outcome expectation is for fast food fast, but the experience is what is remembered. Call centers the world over, whether B2C or B2B, stay up late worrying about speed of answer and call handle time (outcome metrics), forgetting customer research shows that first-call resolution and knowledgeability of the call center rep are more important to customers (experience measures).5
The edginess of today’s powerful wired and dangerous customers has been fueled by more than just a change in their service expectations. The energy behind their newfound assertiveness is a fundamental change in what we call the service covenant—the unspoken people-serving-people contract that has been the essence of commerce for centuries. When service providers completely remove the high touch from their high tech service without the consent, consideration, or participation of the customer, they erode customer confidence, create suspicion, and trigger impulses often expressed as thoughts of an “I’m outa here” mutiny.
Wired and Dangerous is first and foremost a picture of today’s new normal customer. We refer to customers as wired and dangerous because they are edgy as well as connected with the Internet-enabled capacity to rapidly gain insight on a particular product or service and to quickly do great harm to the reputation of service providers.
That’s not to say that all customers are technologically wired. Neither of our 86- and 94-year-old mothers is computer savvy—but they are still wired and potentially dangerous. How’s that? Our mothers are personally connected with many who are wired. An unpleasant experience at the grocery store can trigger a disparaging comment to a neighbor who has a social network and a proclivity for pinging Internet-savvy friends. Overnight, a casual comment like “Their meat made me kinda sick” can trigger a social media—driven boycott that makes a sizable dent in the grocery store’s profits. So, even the technologically unskilled customer is dangerous.
More than sounding a warning for all who serve customers, this book provides a compelling rationale for today’s customer restlessness and gives concrete solutions for turning customer admonition into approval and annoyance into advocacy. We have laced the book with an array of highly practical, put-in-place-today suggestions. You will find relevant best-practice examples and heart-tugging stories about those who got it right and some who missed. While the book is intended to stimulate insights and aha’s, it is also a pragmatic recipe for delivering better service while improving long-term relationships with customers.
We will say this later in more elegant ways: we love customers. We truly believe most customers are without malice and possess a keen sense of fairness. We are major fans of customer loyalty—even devotion. Our consulting work with clients is focused on one objective: to help them find ways to increase customer loyalty. Our labels in the book are designed to be descriptive, not judgmental or pejorative. However, the conditions adversely impacting what we will later describe as the age-old service covenant have created in far too many customers a sense of mistrust, disappointment and, given the right circumstances, even anger. Our intent in writing this book is to encourage the righting of a service covenant that has been flipped over and to facilitate moving customer relationships from skeptical indifference to wholesome partnerships.
This book is not exclusively about the online customer. Forrester Research projected e-commerce sales in the United States will grow at a 10 percent compound annual growth rate through 2014. E-commerce sales will represent 8 percent of all retail sales in the U.S. by 2014, up from 6 percent in 2009. Forrester also estimates that online and web-influenced offline sales combined accounted for 42 percent of total retail sales in 2009, and projects that percentage to grow to 53 percent by 2014. The bottom line is this: despite the dramatic influence of the Internet, customers are still going to a store to make most of their purchases.6 But more and more they are going to the store educated and influenced by what they learned online.
Readers sometimes are curious about the logic of a book cover. We hope most will be obvious. The cover of the book is a metaphor for what we portend in the expression “wired and dangerous.” We selected black with caution-light yellow to convey a sense of warning. We made the title and subtitle all lower case to reinforce the idea that the Internet has enabled a disgruntled customer disposition to become dangerous because of its speed and reach. “Customers on fire” have always been a challenge to service providers. But, “customers on fire online” have exponentially increased that threat. The “Wi-Fi” symbol continues the cyber-theme started by lower case, Internet-looking fonts. Finally, we chose the book endorsement by Zappos.com CEO and Founder Tony Hsieh because we believe his Internet-based company and the principles that have guided its amazing success reflect a practical application of the philosophy of Wired and Dangerous.
The book is organized into three parts. Part One (Chapters 1 to 5) describes the situation, Part Two (Chapters 6 to 12) outlines the solutions, and Part Three—we call this section “Flash Drive”—contains tools for implementing the solutions. Don’t look for a ton of how-to’s in the first part. We thought it was important to first provide a comprehensive understanding of today’s customers before launching into the approaches needed to correct problems, close gaps, and repair broken components. We think we more than made up for the dearth of how-to’s in Part One with the generous helping in Parts Two and Three. As a reminder, we have included occasional “go to” sidebars with suggestions of specific tools related to the content nearby.
The text also includes what we call “e-sights,” brief inserts designed to be food for thought. Think of them as insights for the cyber age! For our many readers who like any anecdotal presentation to be backed up by concrete, scientific evidence, we have included a bounty of solid, contemporary customer research. We provide more than a hundred citations plus a detailed bibliography for those wanting to pursue topics in more detail.
Our target reader for this book is everyone who directly serves a customer or who supports someone who serves a customer. As we wrote Wired and Dangerous, we envisioned readers in small enterprises as well as in very large companies. We assumed our audience to be front-line employees as well as executives. For readers in leadership roles, we included a special tool in the Flash Drive part specifically written for you.
We viewed our audience as employees in for-profit, not-for-profit, and governmental organizations as well as mom-and-pop enterprises and sole proprietorships. We crafted the book for organizations that serve customers (B2C) as well as businesses that service other businesses (B2B). At the end of the day, all organizations have customers and all customers are people. Even the most business-to-business (B2B) company is really people-to-people (P2P).
To learn and gain the most from Wired and Dangerous, it might help to remember the adage “We are all self-employed.” Even if you are not in an influential change agent role or the senior leader at the top of the organizational food chain, unless you are in solitary confinement you have some control over ways to enhance the experience of your customers (or those you serve). With a clear picture of the work you would like to do, coupled with a bit of courage, you can always help even the most inwardly focused, rule-entrenched, customer-hostile company move a step closer to being a partner with customers and creating experiences that are positively memorable. At the very least, you are in complete control of your own attitude and the passion you transmit to those you serve.
Don’t think that what is today will also be tomorrow. The future will be even more challenging! However, we believe the path ahead contains great hope, clear opportunity, and fruitful adventure. Think of this book as your periscope to the future and a guide to ready you for the trip. This is a working book—one aimed at being more edgy than conventional, more vivacious than staid, more sensible than scholarly—and much more about practice than philosophy. We hope you enjoy the trip and that you’ll let us know what you think of it. The last page of the book contains ways to reach us easily. We invite you to join our blogs and tweets. Let’s have a conversation about serving today’s wired and dangerous customers.
Customers with a beef or a boast have always been able to share it with their friends. The difference today is that the reach of their connection via the Internet is enormous; the speed of their link is instantaneous. Imagine how quickly the peasants of France could have organized the French Revolution had all of them had a Facebook, Foursquare, or LinkedIn account! Or, if the French writers of messages of resistance had been able to blog their dissent for all to read in real time, thus to coordinate a flash demonstration, boycott, or protest. Wired to an army of like-minded people looking for answers, today’s customers can be dangerous to any service provider unwilling to understand what customers want, adapt to the way they want it, and deliver what they find of value.
“Revolution is not the uprising against preexisting order,” wrote Spanish philosopher José Ortega y Gasset, “but the setting up of a new order contradictory to the traditional one.” Out of turbulent economic times comes a new order. According to recent research by American Express, 9 in 10 Americans (91 percent) consider the level of customer service important when deciding to do business with a company. But only 24 percent of Americans believe companies value their business and will go the extra mile to keep it.7 A 2010 report from RightNow and Harris Interactive indicates that 82 percent of consumers in the United States said they’ve stopped doing business with a company due to a poor customer service experience. Ninety-five percent of customers said after a bad customer experience they would “take action.”8
Those who fail will be those brought down by failing to modify their patterns and practices. Those who succeed will be the ones who embrace the opportunity by shifting their outlook and their operation. They want to repair and maintain the service covenant through a true partnership—an alliance that respects the needs of all and values the pursuit of continuing growth and unending elasticity.9