How good is your company's customer service?

31.10.2008
Many of you work in enterprises that offer customer service. You may not be directly involved, but do you ever think about the quality of those services, how they represent your company? Do you care about whether they make your company look good and allow it to behave in a human manner?

Let me tell you a customer service story: My wife and I both have the same type of cell phone -- the Razr v3. If it wasn't for the poor build quality and the second rate software-engineering, these phones might be good.

Recently my wife's phone, which had been replaced due to a cracked screen, started to shut down randomly, so I filed an insurance claim. The procedure, as you probably know, is they send you a replacement and you return the defective phone. We had opted for insurance so the replacement both times was done by , the sole insurer offered by our miserable cell service provider, .

Let me digress and note that despite two columns that were critical of T-Mobile's service and that were also syndicated in The New York Times' Technology section, I've had no responses from T-Mobile management or their PR people. I'm torn between being surprised and not being hardly surprised at all.

Anyway, through a series of events too complex to go into, I accidentally returned the wrong phone (remember, the phones are, or rather were, identical). Some days later I realized that the wrong phone had been returned and called to straighten things out.

The customer disservice rep I spoke to seemed to have remarkable difficulty understanding the problem so I asked for a supervisor and, of course, I got one of those unsympathetic, passive aggressive people who sound on the edge of being rude (but never rude enough to call them on it) and who pedantically explained the bloody obvious in excruciating detail. I think their goal is to simply try to wear you down so you will just go away.