Susan's Scribblings the Blog

A writer from the Philadelphia area shares the week online.
Susan's Scribblings the Blog
  • Who the Heck is Kayewer?
  • Tag: customer service

    • Blustomers

      Posted at 1:17 pm by kayewer, on February 23, 2025

      (Originally Posted May 19, 2019)

      What makes a good customer? Good manners. What makes good customer service associates? Same thing.

      We seem to have forgotten that over the past few years. Being on the giving end, I see many bad customers, and I hope nobody ever perceives me as being bad at my job just because I give news a customer doesn’t like, but some folks try anybody’s patience without even saying anything.

      My customer contact is small, but in my office are several dozen people taking phone calls, and a few miles away I know that a branch office gets many visitors every day. If you’ve worked in customer service for a while, you know you’re bound to deal with people who get the day started by being annoying. The worst? First call of the day. It sets the tone for the next eight hours, and the coffee hasn’t kicked in yet (for the customer or the associate).

      It used to be the bad customer was once a week if that often. Now it can be two to three times a day. Sometimes it’s by the same person all three times, especially on the phone. When you work in a phone contact center, it’s not hard to pinpoint who is dealing with a difficult person. The conversation usually becomes a shouting match, and it’s the phone associate who gets their ears pounded.

      In public contact jobs, it’s important to be civil and service minded, but we call come to work in different frames of mind, and if you find somebody behind the counter who is having a hard time giving a good first impression, yelling won’t help.

      If I could give a future customer with a complaint one bit of advice, I’d say take a step back before you storm in. Start your experience with a polite greeting, then say you have an issue and be prepared to state your case calmly and with facts only.

      The two most annoying words ever uttered by a customer might well be, “you people.” It’s in emails and uttered a few times a day by fuming folks who would serve their blood pressure better by pausing a minute before launching the big guns (namely their vocal chords) at somebody. I would like to remove them from usage. Imagine having a bone to pick, and you start out by making the person who can tip the scales of customer satisfaction in your favor start to doubt if the encounter will end without somebody exploding first. There is no conspiracy brotherhood in customer service aimed at making your experience bad, and besides, we are all people.

      A person recently read off a phone rep for calling her ma’am because she said that was similar to using the dreaded “N word.” The person fielding the call was black. So much for starting off that experience right, your ladyship. Plus, I never heard of that reference anywhere (if somebody has, please clue me in where it started). Anyway, this particular person had a religious title revealed only after this exchange. That was on them.

      Sometimes a bad customer simply talks over the person trying to help, as if filibuster alone will solve everything. Simply listening to your customer associate will impart plenty of knowledge and a sense of what may have gone wrong, if you give them a chance to get it out.

      One time I got an email from a customer which started out saying our website sucked because they could not log in. The problem was not the site: the customer had simply never opened an account to log into. No, I didn’t tell them that it was they who sucked, because it was a simple issue with a simple answer.

      We have all been guilty lately of mouthing off prematurely and not respecting ourselves or others’ sense of decorum. A customer service call should be a civil statement of a problem or question, followed by a resolution. If you get an unsatisfactory answer, you can escalate your complaint, but don’t give yourself (or us) a stroke. We’re all stressed out, it’s true. The news is full of chaos and bluster. However, the purpose of business is to provide and satisfy a need, receiving funds to continue the business and pay those who run it. If something goes wrong, don’t be a thorn in somebody’s side. Step back before you speak, and save the soapboxes for the politicians.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged business, customer service, life, marketing, technology
    • From Behind the Counter

      Posted at 1:56 am by kayewer, on July 29, 2012

      I’ve had enough bad experiences with cashiers and sales clerks to know that, as a country, we are going to heck in a handcart when it comes to face-to-face customer service.

      Recently I was shopping at a Rite-Aid and encountered a malcontent clerk who likes to gripe about his job in rapid-fire speech that fueled my inner thoughts about whether or not I actually did hear him correctly?  I don’t think he said anything fireable, but why should I listen to him complaining about his job?  At least he has a job.  He ought to shut up and ring up my purchase.

      The other day I was snookered into taking a mall survey.  At the local mall sits a senior citizen hunched over a clipboard; she tries to solicit participants from a table at the head of the food court, and my friend and I have seen her for quite some time and felt for her situation.  We sat down and took her survey.  It turned out my friend was allergic to the food item she was touting, so I wound up participating alone.  You know how these things go:  we had to walk down a back entrance corridor lined with unlit cinder block walls, to a dimly lit office manned by a pleasant enough clerk who welcomed us to her little survey haven as if we had come to Shangri-La.

      Her assistant, however, was not of the same ilk.  He was a disinterested young fellow probably on the demographic fence between 18 and a basket-weaving Associate’s degree, whose tone of voice and behavior did not spur our interest in the product at all.  He even commented that he needed to double-check the entries the lady had written on her clipboard because he had trouble reading it.  I was tempted to remind him that, someday, he would probably have arthritis so bad he wouldn’t be able to text anymore, but I kept that to myself.

      It seemed I would have to take a product home and test it (that is eat it and survive), so he went to the back room to fetch it.  The product had two or three varieties, but the one he told me I would try didn’t match the one he brought out; he seemlessly took it away and came back with another one without batting an eye or betraying his mistake, but I was dumbfounded.  The fellow couldn’t read the difference in the labels on three products?

      I’m sitting here now to tell you that I survived eating the product, which I managed to get home from the mall in nothing more than a plastic bag and a salvaged freezer tote in my friend’s car.  It made it through a half hour of shopping in the mall and another half hour or so at Target, then the trip home.  I just wish the follow-up survey would include a part on how the survey staff treated us.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged customer service, mall surveys, Rite-Aid
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