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View Full Version : Top 5 reasons why “The customer is Always Right” is wrong.


ZachKC
03-21-2008, 12:55 PM
http://positivesharing.com/2008/03/top-5-reasons-why-the-customer-is-always-right-is-wrong/

When the customer isn’t right - for your business

One woman who frequently flew on Southwest, was constantly disappointed with every aspect of the company’s operation. In fact, she became known as the “Pen Pal” because after every flight she wrote in with a complaint.

She didn’t like the fact that the company didn’t assign seats; she didn’t like the absence of a first-class section; she didn’t like not having a meal in flight; she didn’t like Southwest’s boarding procedure; she didn’t like the flight attendants’ sporty uniforms and the casual atmosphere.

Her last letter, reciting a litany of complaints, momentarily stumped Southwest’s customer relations people. They bumped it up to Herb’s [Kelleher, CEO of Southwest] desk, with a note: ‘This one’s yours.’

In sixty seconds, Kelleher wrote back and said, ‘Dear Mrs. Crabapple, We will miss you. Love, Herb.’”

The phrase “The customer is always right” was originally coined by Harry Gordon Selfridge, the founder of Selfridge’s department store in London in 1909, and is typically used by businesses to:

1. Convince customers that they will get good service at this company
2. Convince employees to give customers good service

Fortunately more and more businesses are abandoning this maxim - ironically because it leads to bad customer service.

Here are the top five reasons why “The customer is always right” is wrong.

1: It makes employees unhappy

Gordon Bethune is a brash Texan (as is Herb Kelleher, coincidentally) who is best known for turning Continental Airlines around “From Worst to First,” a story told in his book of the same title from 1998. He wanted to make sure that both customers and employees liked the way Continental treated them, so he made it very clear that the maxim “the customer is always right” didn’t hold sway at Continental.

In conflicts between employees and unruly customers he would consistently side with his people. Here’s how he puts it:

When we run into customers that we can’t reel back in, our loyalty is with our employees. They have to put up with this stuff every day. Just because you buy a ticket does not give you the right to abuse our employees . . .

We run more than 3 million people through our books every month. One or two of those people are going to be unreasonable, demanding jerks. When it’s a choice between supporting your employees, who work with you every day and make your product what it is, or some irate jerk who demands a free ticket to Paris because you ran out of peanuts, whose side are you going to be on?

You can’t treat your employees like serfs. You have to value them . . . If they think that you won’t support them when a customer is out of line, even the smallest problem can cause resentment.

So Bethune trusts his people over unreasonable customers. What I like about this attitude is that it balances employees and customers, where the “always right” maxim squarely favors the customer - which is not a good idea, because, as Bethune says, it causes resentment among employees.

Of course there are plenty of examples of bad employees giving lousy customer service. But trying to solve this by declaring the customer “always right” is counter-productive.
2: It gives abrasive customers an unfair advantage

Using the slogan “The customer is always right” abusive customers can demand just about anything - they’re right by definition, aren’t they? This makes the employees’ job that much harder, when trying to rein them in.

Also, it means that abusive people get better treatment and conditions than nice people. That always seemed wrong to me, and it makes much more sense to be nice to the nice customers to keep them coming back.
3: Some customers are bad for business

Most businesses think that “the more customers the better”. But some customers are quite simply bad for business.

Danish IT service provider ServiceGruppen proudly tell this story:

One of our service technicians arrived at a customer’s site for a maintenance task, and to his great shock was treated very rudely by the customer.

When he’d finished the task and returned to the office, he told management about his experience. They promptly cancelled the customer’s contract.

Just like Kelleher dismissed the irate lady who kept complaining (but somehow also kept flying on Southwest), ServiceGruppen fired a bad customer. Note that it was not even a matter of a financial calculation - not a question of whether either company would make or lose money on that customer in the long run. It was a simple matter of respect and dignity and of treating their employees right.
4: It results in worse customer service

Rosenbluth International, a corporate travel agency, took it even further. CEO Hal Rosenbluth wrote an excellent book about their approach called Put The Customer Second - Put your people first and watch’em kick butt.

Rosenbluth argues that when you put the employees first, they put the customers first. Put employees first, and they will be happy at work. Employees who are happy at work give better customer service because:

* They care more about other people, including customers
* They have more energy
* They are happy, meaning they are more fun to talk to and interact with
* They are more motivated

On the other hand, when the company and management consistently side with customers instead of with employees, it sends a clear message that:

* Employees are not valued
* That treating employees fairly is not important
* That employees have no right to respect from customers
* That employees have to put up with everything from customers

When this attitude prevails, employees stop caring about service. At that point, real good service is almost impossible - the best customers can hope for is fake good service. You know the kind I mean: corteous on the surface only.
5: Some customers are just plain wrong

Herb Kelleher agrees, as this passage From Nuts! the excellent book about Southwest Airlines shows:

Herb Kelleher […] makes it clear that his employees come first — even if it means dismissing customers. But aren’t customers always right? “No, they are not,” Kelleher snaps. “And I think that’s one of the biggest betrayals of employees a boss can possibly commit. The customer is sometimes wrong. We don’t carry those sorts of customers. We write to them and say, ‘Fly somebody else. Don’t abuse our people.’”

If you still think that the customer is always right, read this story from Bethune’s book “From Worst to First”:

A Continental flight attendant once was offended by a passenger’s child wearing a hat with Nazi and KKK emblems on it. It was pretty offensive stuff, so the attendant went to the kid’s father and asked him to put away the hat. “No,” the guy said. “My kid can wear what he wants, and I don’t care who likes it.”

The flight attendant went into the cockpit and got the first officer, who explained to the passenger the FAA regulation that makes it a crime to interfere with the duties of a crew member. The hat was causing other passengers and the crew discomfort, and that interfered with the flight attendant’s duties. The guy better put away the hat.

He did, but he didn’t like it. He wrote many nasty letters. We made every effort to explain our policy and the federal air regulations, but he wasn’t hearing it. He even showed up in our executive suite to discuss the matter with me. I let him sit out there. I didn’t want to see him and I didn’t want to listen to him. He bought a ticket on our airplane, and that means we’ll take him where he wants to go. But if he’s going to be rude and offensive, he’s welcome to fly another airline.

The fact is that some customers are just plain wrong, that businesses are better of without them, and that managers siding with unreasonable customers over employees is a very bad idea, that results in worse customer service.

So put your people first. And watch them put the customers first.

Merlin
03-21-2008, 01:04 PM
It is fairly common sensical, but poor manager and executives love to manage by slogans and don't have the energy/intellect to rely on their own good sense.

Flex Gunmetal
03-21-2008, 01:04 PM
http://i43.photobucket.com/albums/e369/Stefangs/colinaintreadingallthat.jpg

ZachKC
03-21-2008, 01:09 PM
Is that a lot of reading? hmmm...

socalorado
03-21-2008, 01:12 PM
Is that a lot of reading? hmmm...

Great post ZACK!

footstepsfrom#27
03-21-2008, 01:14 PM
It most cases it costs far more to retrain a new employee than any single customer is worth. For some odd reason managers frequently don't realize this.

DHallblows
03-21-2008, 01:21 PM
Is that a lot of reading? hmmm...

Hahaha. If I had that much to read out of a text book, I'd be pissed and YES a lot of reading. But as soon as that sh*t is posted on a Broncos message board, I'm all ears :rofl:

TailgateNut
03-21-2008, 01:25 PM
It most cases it costs far more to retrain a new employee than any single customer is worth. For some odd reason managers frequently don't realize this.



Depends on who your customers are! In my business losing a customer/ being "blacklisted" can be suicidal. Most of our business is with water districts and/ or cities/ counties. They do have a buddy buddy communication system which can remove you from bid notices/pre-qual lists in a heartbeat.

So the customer is right (most of the time) depending on associated costs and contractual obligations.

DomCasual
03-21-2008, 01:41 PM
Is that a lot of reading? hmmm...

I read it.

Florida_Bronco
03-21-2008, 02:24 PM
I worked customer service for the company that handled Macy's and Bloomingdale's charge accounts, and believe me I have some horror stories about dumb customers.

houghtam
03-21-2008, 02:44 PM
I always tell my employees that the customer may not always be "correct", but the customer is always right. That way they know that some customers are there just to create a hassle, and that it is not their responsibility to deal with them...they need to call a manager ASAP.

broncocalijohn
03-21-2008, 02:54 PM
I always try to give the customer the benefit of the doubt but as a owner and operator, I know where the problem lies and that is me or the problematic customer. I will explain in simple terms and let them decide for themselves. I also have very few companies that compete with me so I know if I am right, they better deal with it or they probably wont get any other company to help them. I am a push over in most other instances but sometimes you need to tell the customer that it is this way or the highway for them. The only problem is they talk to others and of course bend the story their way to make you look like the bad guy. Southwest has balls even if all their flight attendants dont (and yes, even the dude F.A.) have any.

broncosteven
03-21-2008, 04:22 PM
I read it.

What did it say?

Please state in 1000 words or more.

Beantown Bronco
03-21-2008, 04:41 PM
I don't know which I hate more:

"The Customer is always right"

or

"No is not an option"


Both are inaccurate statements and both can cause unnecessary stress.

broncosteven
03-21-2008, 04:46 PM
I don't know which I hate more:

"The Customer is always right"

or

"No is not an option"


Both are inaccurate statements and both can cause unnecessary stress.

Can I tell my wife that "No is not an option"?

RhymesayersDU
03-21-2008, 05:18 PM
We've experienced stuff like this at my Dad's restaurant.

The article states it perfectly, a guy wanting a free ticket to Paris because they ran out of peanuts. Everybody wants something for free now, and we've got this culture that most people know if they bitch long enough, or to the right people, they'll get something free, no matter how ridiculous the claim is.

That One Guy
03-21-2008, 05:25 PM
While I agree with the article, Continental is the worst airline I've ever flown and their customer service is terrible. I'm sure not giving anything away free makes good business sense but it doesn't make happy customers. Unfortunately, in the Expedia Age, noone really looks at airlines when buying a ticket so these bad customer service companies can thrive in the right industry.

broncosteven
03-21-2008, 05:28 PM
We've experienced stuff like this at my Dad's restaurant.

The article states it perfectly, a guy wanting a free ticket to Paris because they ran out of peanuts. Everybody wants something for free now, and we've got this culture that most people know if they b**** long enough, or to the right people, they'll get something free, no matter how ridiculous the claim is.

I am glad I get to hide behind a helpdesk. The execs are cool and just want answers, the users are the screamers.

Northman
03-21-2008, 05:51 PM
Customers are ALWAYS wrong. :)

Sodak
03-21-2008, 06:14 PM
I'm a small business owner with ten employees. This is an excellent post.

It just re-affirms what I've always done with employee's and customers.

I knew I was right.:thumbs:

ohiobronco2
03-21-2008, 09:18 PM
Great post Zach.

TexanBob
03-21-2008, 10:08 PM
I don't know which I hate more:

"The Customer is always right"

or

"No is not an option"


Both are inaccurate statements and both can cause unnecessary stress.

I'd take either over the "Change is good" mantra I've heard from managers.

No, change is not necessarily good. Give me a reason why the change is worthwhile and I'll make up my own mind whether the change is good. But don't change just for the sake of change or so some worthless manager can justify his existence. Change to better the company and get the input of those most affected by the change first before you implement the change.

I don't accept "the way we've always done it" as a valid excuse for rejecting change but you better come up with some reasoning behind changing before you expect me to sign on to it.

SureShot
03-21-2008, 10:16 PM
Relax TexasBob its the weekend and the tourney is on.

TexanBob
03-21-2008, 10:23 PM
The article states it perfectly, a guy wanting a free ticket to Paris because they ran out of peanuts. Everybody wants something for free now, and we've got this culture that most people know if they b**** long enough, or to the right people, they'll get something free, no matter how ridiculous the claim is.

Yes, I've seen this situation increase quite a bit in the past 10-15 years. They've got it in their heads that if they start with an absolutely ridiculous opening demand, that the "middle ground" compromise will be more to their favor than if they started out with a reasonable demand.

Unfotunately for them, I see the tactic for what it is so I get even more stingy with my counteroffer than I might otherwise be. I work in cable television and if somebody loses their service for a couple of hours, we automatically offer an entire day's credit for their entire service. But if somebody demands three months of free service, for example, I'll calculate the *actual* value of the *actual* time for the actual channel that they were without service and tell them that's the adjustment they deserve for the amount of lost service. Now, out of the goodness of my heart, I might give them a entire day's worth of credit for their entire service but only if they move off their ridiculous demand to something more reality based.

The truth of the matter is that there are 2-to-5% assholes in any customer base that you would rather do without their business and you should not feel bad about identifying those customers and urging them to go elsewhere. :thumbsup:

TexanBob
03-21-2008, 10:30 PM
She didn’t like the fact that the company didn’t assign seats; she didn’t like the absence of a first-class section; she didn’t like not having a meal in flight; she didn’t like Southwest’s boarding procedure; she didn’t like the flight attendants’ sporty uniforms and the casual atmosphere.

I'll bet she never complained about the airline's cheaper fares. Nobody, I guess, bothered to explain to her that the reason Southwest's prices were always lower was because they didn't assign seats, they didn't have a first-class section, they didn't have an in-flight meal, etc.

I'd bet she complains that her Yugo isn't as comfortable as a Mercedes too.

gunns
03-21-2008, 11:15 PM
You can’t treat your employees like serfs. You have to value them . . . If they think that you won’t support them when a customer is out of line, even the smallest problem can cause resentment.


The main thing is to have a good manager who is astute at identifying the nature of the disagreement. A lot of time its the frustration of the customer in not getting what they want, when they want it, and taking it out on my employees. There are times that an employee doesn't want to appear wrong in front of the customer. If I see this happen I never say it in front of the customer, but I do lay it out to the employee later. The majority of the time I do find my employees right and using exemplerary customer service in trying to explain it to the customer. I want my employees to know I have faith in their expertise. It's important to maintaining good employees and in my business they get no compensation from maintaining a customer. They do it out of the goodness of their heart....and the need for a paycheck.

Sassy
03-22-2008, 01:03 AM
Talk about customer service...we have never usually waited long for a meal in The Outback...tonight we did...it must have been at least 45 minutes...we mentioned it to them when they finally brought our food and the manager came back 2 minutes later and said I looked at the time the order was brought it...That's unacceptable for our restuarant...enjoy your meal on us! It was a $75 meal...we only had to pay for the wine!

TailgateNut
03-22-2008, 03:38 PM
here's five more cents worth:

The customer gets what he/ she pays for.
Go cheap, don't expect top notch service and quality
Pay the price and you have a reason to bitch if you don't get the quality and service you should receive.

Don't stay at the Super 8 and bitch about cockroaches.:~ohyah!:

Dagmar
03-22-2008, 03:46 PM
In working retail since I have come to this country, I have notice an asshole ALWAYS gets his way, a nice polite customer often gets screwed.

TailgateNut
03-22-2008, 04:15 PM
In working retail since I have come to this country, I have notice an a-hole ALWAYS gets his way, a nice polite customer often gets screwed.



Then the business you work for needs to take a hard look at their policies.

cutler_to_marshall
03-22-2008, 04:42 PM
Hahaha. If I had that much to read out of a text book, I'd be pissed and YES a lot of reading. But as soon as that sh*t is posted on a Broncos message board, I'm all ears :rofl:

i was thinking the same thing. If i spent half the amount of time on my medical textbooks as i do on the message board reading, i would have been a doctor before even finishing up my undergrad by now.

TexanBob
03-22-2008, 04:48 PM
Don't stay at the Super 8 and b**** about cockroaches.:~ohyah!:

I stay at Super 8 all the time and almost never have a bad experience. Yeah, once there was a cockroach (biggest thing on six legs I've ever seen in my life) but it was reclaimed Louisiana swampland so I figured it was somewhat excuseable. Then again, I'm not expecting the Hilton.

Now, Day's Inn, that's another story.