What if the rest of the world had customer service that
rivaled Disney’s?
This is a question I have been asking myself lately as I
have bumped into less than stellar customer service in more than one location
and, I am missing my happy place.
But really, what if?
If Disney can provide customer service that meets guests’ needs and
sometimes WOWS them, then why can’t other organizations, businesses, etc.? I know and recognize great customer service
when I see it and experience it. Are
others able to do the same?
The husband tells me that comparing other experiences to
Disney may not be fair; that my expectations may be too high. Hmmm. . .
In a day and age when service and experience are a
commodity, I would think investing time and money into customer service would
be profitable for a business.
Let’s take a recent example with our internet provider. Upon waking Saturday morning, the internet
was out. A text message from a neighbor
indicated that it wasn’t just us. A
phone call to the company, which announced that I was a “prestige customer”
upon receiving my information indicated a cable had been cut about 90 miles
away and a significant portion of our state was without internet. I asked for a credit on my account, which was
completed in the amount of time to click a button, and an estimated time of
repair. No information was
available. I phoned 11 hours later,
again to inquire about repair time, and still none was available. What would make this experience even better
would be not having to say “customer service” seven times to the voice prompts
on the automated answering system or having to verify the same personal
information if the call gets transferred to another person. Oh, how I wish I could help the designers of
those systems. . .
Another example is a recent visit to a pumpkin farm; a trip
our family takes annually. The farm
changed hands last year, so the jury is still out about whether or not we will
continue to make the trip. A highlight
is the pumpkin catapult, which was in pieces when we went by this fall. I asked and was told that it broke during the
summer and they just now ordered the piece to repair it. They were expecting the part to arrive the day
prior, but alas, no luck. The tractor
that pulled the wagon to take us to the field broke down—belt came off—but
another tractor and wagon came to get us.
Items had been added to the farm but they either required additional
fees or were for younger children—our boy of 10 was too old. Upon arrival I asked questions about times
for their “show” and the lady in the ticket booth couldn’t tell us and we were
told to go ask someone else who also couldn’t tell us. We were told to listen for an announcement. Really?
This same farm used to publish a “newspaper” of sorts that would be
distributed to guests which had lots of information. Not anymore.
So, the admission price increased, but the service and experience have
declined.
Then there was a visit to a local medical clinic. While I won’t go into details, my visit
prompted a letter detailing how customer service was botched all around in the
30 minutes I was there, including entering our insurance co-pay incorrectly
into the computer. I received an apology
and appreciation for giving them the feedback so that they could fix all of the
things mentioned in the letter. I am
still shaking my head about that one.
I could go on. . . the cell phone company botching our bill
two months in a row that required three phone calls and two visits to the cell
phone store, one of which took two hours.
People complain when Disney’s dining reservation system is
down or about glitches in the My Disney Experience app or web-site. I get it; guests at Walt Disney World expect
stellar customer service and they get it almost all of the time. So instead of being complacent when something
at Disney isn’t working and comparing it to the rest of the world—which makes
Disney look darn good, let’s start comparing the rest of the world with Disney.
My message to the rest of the world: You better step up your game! Some 32 million of us appreciate Disney’s customer
service so much that we visit annually.
We are now comparing all the rest of our customer service experiences
with our Disney experiences. And, where
our heart goes, so goes our money.
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