Categorized | All, Loyalty

T-Mobile vs. the customer: Round four (getting stood-up)

by Kevin Stirtz

  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Yahoo Buzz
  • PrintFriendly
  • Share

T-Mobile vs. the customer: Round four (getting stood-up) T-Mobile vs. the customer: Round four (getting stood-up)

This is the fourth in a series of articles that detail my recent experience as a T-Mobile customer. As an 8 year customer, my goal is to upgrade my phone without paying more than a new customer would pay for the same phone.  You can see the prior article here.

Round three ended with an unhappy customer. My request was escalated to someone who was less than professional, having to be guided with both a script and someone standing next to him, telling him what to say. His performance was an embarrassment to T-Mobile and far below what I have come to expect from them.

Using a subjective point system to keep track, T-Mobile is now at negative 17 points for this customer service issue. My next step was to contact their executive customer service team. It’s their job to handle situations their standard customer service channels fail to resolve. They’ve done well in the past so I was optimistic they would turn things around.

Unfortunately, I was disappointed.

After ending my call with “Albert” (see round three) I called T-Mobile’s executive customer service team. It was evening so my call went to a voice mail. But it was a real person’s voice mail. She said she would return my call as soon as possible.

After three days I had no response.

At this point, things do not look good for a positive outcome. When their top customer service people fail to respond, it tells me the company is not placing a high priority on this issue. I’m going to deduct 3 points for not responding to my voice mail. This puts them at negative 20 points for this customer service situation.

As a customer, this makes it difficult to believe all the times I heard them say they value my customer loyalty. Words are fine until they are found to be empty. If your actions do not align with the words you use, your customers will get a mixed-message. Then which message should they believe?

They will believe the message your actions send.

I have at least one more customer service channel to try. It’s more of a back-channel. And a customer should never have to do this. But I will try just to see if we can turn this customer service issue into a win for both the company and the customer.

Stay tuned for Round Five coming soon.

Other articles you might like:

How to Exceed Your Customer’s Expectations

Customer Service Training 101

Tags: , , , ,

Categories: All Loyalty

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