Categorized | All, Experience

Jitterbug Focuses on Customer Experience

by Kevin Stirtz

  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Yahoo Buzz
  • PrintFriendly
  • Share

Jitterbug Focuses on Customer Experience

jitterbug

An article in the Business Mirror today talks about the growing backlash toward outsourced customer service. It discusses Dell’s new service that provides North American based customer service, for an extra fee.

Dell finally gets the message that their customer want support staff who can actually help them, rather than read from a script, and their solution is to charge for it. To me this is like the airlines charging customers to buy a ticket through a real person rather than the Internet.

The problem here is that both situations involve the customer paying extra for something they expect to be included in the price of the product or service. And it’s a reasonable expectation. They shouldn’t have to pay for these.

That’s why I love the attitude of David Inns, CEO of Jitterbug. He said they are focused on giving their customers what they want. And they have found that providing good service is not as expensive as their outsourcing counterparts might think.

From the article:

Inns said the company briefly considered putting call center overseas—he, too, had heard that costs could be radically cut.

But he said those estimates leave out the cost of frustrating customers. “What’s missing from those estimates is what the impact is on customer satisfaction and what is the impact on first-call resolution” — that is, resolving the issue in one try.

Finally! A CEO who understands that frustrated customers impose a cost on companies. And, he notes that further costs are imposed when you do not resolve customer service issues quickly.

If you consider the loyalty costs of upset customers (increased attrition, lower share of wallet, negative word of mouth) and add those to the hard costs of not resolving customer service issues quickly then you have a different set of numbers to deal with.

Jitterbug seems to have a different approach. Their focus seems to be on how to give their customers the experience they want. That’s completely different than designing customer service based with a goal of minimizing costs.

And it will produce different results.

In the long run, companies like Jitterbug will outlast, outmaneuver and outgrow companies like Dell. They’ll do so because they put the customer first and they build their businesses around service them in a way that is profitable and sustainable. That’s a winning combination.

Other articles you might like:

How to Exceed Your Customer’s Expectations

Customer Service Training 101

Tags: , , , ,

Categories: All Experience

This article was written by:

Kevin Stirtz - who has written 621 posts on AmazingServiceGuy.com.

Kevin Stirtz is the Amazing Service Guy, a speaker and trainer who helps organizations of all kinds deliver Amazing Customer Service. His recent book: "More Loyal Customers" has won 5 star reviews at Amazon.com. Kevin lives in the Twin Cities (Minneapolis & St. Paul). More at: author's website.

Contact the author

Leave a Reply

Service Recovery

5 Steps to Avoid “Doing a Toyota.”

When a company makes a mistake, it can be the brightest moment in their history.

Toyota had that opportunity. But they missed their moment. Big time.

How a company reacts, removes the pain, and repairs the emotional connection shows the true colors of that organization more than almost any situation they might encounter.

Technology

Peachtree knows that customer service is cool

Customer service is the new marketing because now companies can no longer control what people are saying about them. Everyday, customers and prospects are ranting and raving about your company on social networking platforms like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube. Companies that don’t get customer service and don’t react to what customers are talking about are doomed to fail.

Feedback

Focus on customer service in 2010 (finally?)

This may be it. This may be the year that it finally happens. 2010 may just be the year that companies start to focus on their customers and serving them well.

Now, I am cautiously optimistic about this focus on customer service, but let me tell you why I feel this way.

1. Brands are using a focus on customers as a competitive differentiator in their advertisements.

Free Customer Service Tips

Train the Trainer – Amazing Service Toolkit

Now you can improve customer service and save money.

Our new Trainer's Toolkit enables you to conduct a professional customer service seminar in your organization at a fraction of the cost of hiring a professional trainer. Click here to learn more.

Customer Service Tools

Training Courses

Archives