Showing posts with label small business. Show all posts
Showing posts with label small business. Show all posts

Tuesday, 12 February 2013

Customer Service and the Small Business

One thing that small businesses should be able to do much better than any large business is customer service.  If you have a small business, it's something that might set you apart.

Why?  Let me illustrate why by giving you a couple of examples of what happened to me this week:

The Small Business:


I phoned a mobile mechanic I've used before to pick up my Dad's car and MOT it.  The car hadn't been driven for around 8 months, wouldn't start and wasn't taxed or insured.  My dad has Alzheimer's and thinks he still drives it every day.  He was upset about the idea of us taking his car off him but accepted it had to go for an MOT.

no, this isn't the actual car (but doesn't it look amazing?)

The mobile mechanic had just had his van stolen so at first said he couldn't do it.  However, he found someone with a pick-up truck and organised collection (and delivery back to my house, so we didn't upset my dad further) - all without fuss.  Fabulous customer service - friendly, helpful, understanding, considerate and prompt.  I can highly recommend him if you want a car mechanic in Warrington.

neither is this one...

The Large Business:


This very same week, my parents' phone stopped working. I spent 8 days trying to communicate with BT about it.  It took 10 days to fix it (including being told 6 times it was fixed when it wasn't) despite it being marked as a priority because of their age.  I have discovered:
  • each call to BT takes about half an hour  - you can have a shower, get dressed and make your breakfast while you are waiting to speak to someone
  • after an engineer has worked on it, they send an automated message to say the phone line "should be OK" now.  "Should"? Is it not someone's job to actually check? It would appear not.
  • When it isn't OK, it takes another half hour of waiting on hold to speak to a human being to report the fault yet again (and again and again...)
  • BT employs contractors on a paid-by-job basis.  I've been told that when the job looks complicated, these contractors sometimes just pass it off as fixed. BT also have their own engineers and you may stumble across one eventually when your luck changes.
not quite old enough to be a phone engineer...

Why am I telling you this?

Because it illustrates the difference between how a very large company responds to customers when solving their problems and how a small one does it so much better.  And quicker!

As a small business, you can respond to customer needs quickly and directly.  As a customer this week, with a problem each time related to my elderly parents, I was dealt with in two very different ways.  The small business stepped up and responded with a personal service, which I was happy to pay extra for.  The large business? It gets worse.  When I said I was worried about leaving my elderly parents without a phone line overnight, I was told quite sharply: "There's nothing to worry about".  Really?!  One has Alzheimer's and sometimes wanders off.  One has had several serious falls.  They have problems using a mobile phone (heck, Dad can't even remember it's a phone, he thinks it's a clock). How would they summon help?  Wouldn't you worry?  

who shall we ring next?

I know everyone has real-life stories like this - which is precisely why excellent customer service really matters to people.

What can you do for your customers to make life easier for them?  Easy online ordering, easy ways to contact you, quick response times, flexible approach, personal responses, extras like gift-wrapping or gift cards, sending direct to the gift recipient ... none of it is difficult for a small business, but sometimes it appears pretty much impossible for the giants.

Go on - go the extra mile.  Shine out from the competition.  It's well worth the extra effort and might just make somebody's day.

Wednesday, 29 August 2012

A Right Royal Rant...

Before I start, I should say that I use Royal Mail a lot - and they rarely let me down.  Mostly, they surpass my expectations by getting first class mail to its destination, often hundreds of miles away, in less than 24 hours, which makes me (and my website customers) happy.

But when I pay extra for a "guaranteed" service, I expect a bit more.  Or, at least, for the parcel to turn up when it's supposed to!

So when I got an email from Craftseller magazine saying the hearts hadn't arrived, I was disappointed.  What made it worse was that the email was delayed because of technical problems at my end so I didn't receive it until around 6 pm.

heart bunting

Apparently, the recipient of a delayed or missing parcel can't do anything at all about it, even if they have the tracking number.  Is the system wrong here?  Surely at some point that parcel becomes the property of the recipient? When?  Only on actual delivery? 

By the time I rang Royal Mail, the call centre was closed. Of course.

This morning, it took 20 minutes of pressing various numbers and listening to various recorded voices telling me about options I never knew existed, before I found my way through the confusing audio-maze to discover a real human. Oh great joy!

No disrespect meant, but I seriously can't imagine many worse jobs than working in Royal Mail's complaints department call centre (I once worked on BT's complaint line so I have some idea!) - however, despite being unable to help, the person I eventually stumbled across was very polite and did apologise (several times).

So, for legal reasons, they can't send a parcel already in the post to an alternative address (I did think that was a long shot, but we missed the photo shoot so its arrival at the photo shoot address today is a bit pointless).  They can't do anything, really, apart from refund the postage charge. 

parcels awaiting posting

Right now, I have to remind myself that they deliver a lot of parcels for me that get there without problem.

Oh, but I really do think there's something seriously wrong when what should be a very simple customer services phone call is so complicated.  It's not a unique story, is it?

No wonder people comment on the excellent customer service a small business can give them.  One phone call or email and you're speaking to the business owner, who cares and who can make a difference to your experience - another reason to buy handmade?

Although we do generally rely quite heavily on Royal Mail to get the goods to you...