as much as management and some of their utterly stupid business policies.
I've been reading some of CS archives and noticed that while many of the customers are assholes, they tend to have a point. Their problem is that they overreact and blame the wrong person for their problem. However, the front line employee is unable to help them because corporate has some dumbass policy forces them to play some game. Either they end up being forced to ask all these stupid questions, enforce stupid rules, push some store credit thing, or jump through a shitload of hoops just for a simple transaction.
Just an example of this is this Dell Customer Service call: WARNING LANGUAGE. To summerize, customer had to go through their "automated crap" and an hour later finally gets through to a rep only to then be forced to give more unnecessary information. As someone who has been on the other end of this, I can sympathize with this guy (even if he was a total asshole to the rep). All he wanted to know was how to turn off his computer and he did get the answer in the end. It took mere seconds to resolve, but because of following policy to the letter, the employee was unable to solve a simple problem as easily as it should have been solved.
I can't blame the customer for being irate at this point. I'd be irate after jumping through all these hoops (though I hope I wouldn't take it out on the clerk). I'm not saying I blame the employee either. After all he's put in a rough spot where he probably wants to just get this guy off the phone. He could just give the employee the answer, but then he'd get chewed out for not following policy (no matter how unnecessary it was). But because he followed policy, the customer only ended up getting more irate.
So to clarify, I'm not saying customers are justified in chewing out reps, or that all customers are perfect. But if management wouldn't have such assine and unnecessary policies, there would be less sucky customers.
I've been reading some of CS archives and noticed that while many of the customers are assholes, they tend to have a point. Their problem is that they overreact and blame the wrong person for their problem. However, the front line employee is unable to help them because corporate has some dumbass policy forces them to play some game. Either they end up being forced to ask all these stupid questions, enforce stupid rules, push some store credit thing, or jump through a shitload of hoops just for a simple transaction.
Just an example of this is this Dell Customer Service call: WARNING LANGUAGE. To summerize, customer had to go through their "automated crap" and an hour later finally gets through to a rep only to then be forced to give more unnecessary information. As someone who has been on the other end of this, I can sympathize with this guy (even if he was a total asshole to the rep). All he wanted to know was how to turn off his computer and he did get the answer in the end. It took mere seconds to resolve, but because of following policy to the letter, the employee was unable to solve a simple problem as easily as it should have been solved.
I can't blame the customer for being irate at this point. I'd be irate after jumping through all these hoops (though I hope I wouldn't take it out on the clerk). I'm not saying I blame the employee either. After all he's put in a rough spot where he probably wants to just get this guy off the phone. He could just give the employee the answer, but then he'd get chewed out for not following policy (no matter how unnecessary it was). But because he followed policy, the customer only ended up getting more irate.
So to clarify, I'm not saying customers are justified in chewing out reps, or that all customers are perfect. But if management wouldn't have such assine and unnecessary policies, there would be less sucky customers.
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