Branding Fiasco—Better Be Who You Say You Are
by Eileen McDargh
Our experience as customers offers great
instruction into the
concept of branding. Come with me on a recent
"experience" and
you'll see what I mean. Here's the situation:
I want to order an 800 number. On my AT&T
bill is a customer
services number. I call it. A voice mail gives four
options. None of
which I want. Just TRY to get a representative. I
am instructed to
dial another number. I am given three options. Hit
0 for operator
and the disembodied voice says I have called after
hours. The hours
are 7am - 10-pm Monday- Fri. Eastern Standard Time.
Fine. It is now 4am Monday in California. They
should be open. By
4:30am in CA I have called repeatedly and punched
in all the prompts
until I am ready to punch someone. I am still told
by a disembodied
voice that the offices are closed. I try another
number. This time,
I reach a computer voice.
| Computer: |
"I'll try and help
you. Tell me in your own words
what you want." |
| Me: |
"Toll free
service." |
| Computer: |
"I'm sorry. I did
not understand. Let me tell you
what services we offer." |
| Me: |
"I want a
person." |
| Computer: |
"Tell me, in your
own words, what you want."
|
| Me: |
"Toll free
service!" |
| Computer: |
"I am sorry. I do
not understand what you want." |
| Me: |
(screaming) "I
want a person." |
| Computer: |
"I am sorry.
I." |
I SLAM!!!!
I call 00 in frustration. "Operator!!"
| Me: |
"I have been
trying without luck to get someone in customer service. I
have been caught in a voice mail hell with an
atavistic voice. How do
I talk to a person?" |
| Operator: |
"I am sorry you
are having problems. You can talk to a supervisor." |
| Supervisor: |
"Can I help
you?" |
| Me: |
(heatedly) "I
want to ask about a toll free number. I have dialed
three numbers and cannot get in. It says the offices
open at 7am and
now it's almost 8am EST!" |
| Supervisor: |
"Oh, sometimes
they forget to turn off that message so the phones can
ring through. We have to call and tell them." |
| Me: |
(incredulously)
"You mean the PHONE company has employees who do NOT
know their first order of business is to turn on
phones to answer
customers!" |
| Supervisor: |
(calmly) "I am
sorry. Let me give you a different number
than the one you have been calling. You need to call
the office for
AT&T 1-800 Easy Reach. |
"Easy Reach?!??!?" Who are they trying to kid! I call this "Impossible
to Reach".
Branding Lesson #1: Your name sets up an expectation. Live
up to it or suffer.
There is a promise established in what we advertise and name things.
Southwest Airlines had thought to create a baggage claim delivery
time slogan. Then they realized that due to the configuration in
a few of their terminals, to quote such a time was almost impossible.
They dropped the campaign even though it would have been true in
MOST of their sites.
Branding Lesson #2: Your business sets up an expectation.
If you don't deliver for yourself - how can you deliver for the
customer?
A phone company that doesn't answer the phones is a scary thought.
We'd expect it of any other business, but the phone company!! If
you own a paint store and your store is in sorry need of paint,
what does that say? If the waiters in a restaurant cannot tell you
about food on the menu because they never get to eat it, what does
that say? Look at your business with critical eyes. Would you do
business with you?
Branding Lesson #3: The past never counts. The present creates
the brand.
It is the actual in-the-moment experience that creates a brand in
a customer's eyes. Brand is a living entity that is re- earned,
renewed, or revoked with every interaction. Advertising only creates
awareness. I am convinced the very best, most unique, most competitive
maker of a "brand" is the well-trained, empowered employee who can
disregard systems and procedures in order to continue a human interaction.
As more organizations substitute technology for people, the company
that answers its own phone and get humans connected in short order
will win the day.
© Eileen McDargh, McDargh Communications. All rights reserved. You may reprint this article so long as it remains intact with the byline and if all links are made live.
Since 1980, Hall of Fame speaker Eileen McDargh has helped Fortune 100 companies as well as individuals create connections that count and conversations that matter. Her latest book is Gifts from the Mountain-Simple Truths for Life's Complexities. Her other books include Talk Ain't
Cheap...It's Priceless and Work for a Living and Still Be Free to Live, one of the first books to address the notion of balance and authentic work. A 59 year-old grandmother, she recently returned from climbing among the highest mountains in the world. Find out more about this compelling
and effective professional speaker and join her free newsletter by visiting http://www.EileenMcDargh.com.
McDargh
Communications
(949) 496-8640
Eileen@EileenMcDargh.com
www.EileenMcDargh.com
© 2008 McDargh Communications, All rights
reserved
|