Hello All,
Recently, I ordered a few items from Lee Valley, and when I received
the order, I found they had sent me the wrong clamps for the dust
collection hose I ordered. I e-mailed their customer service that
night and here is the reply I received the next morning:
<"We are sorry to hear about the problem that you have encountered with
the clamps and the hose being in opposite directions in your order. I
have the hose (03J6506) and the Clamp (03J6606) at my desk and have
confirmed the problem. I am sending you two Clockwise Clamps (CW),
03J6706 which I have confirmed work with the Hose 03J6506. They will
leave our warehouse Monday and you should receive them within 2 to 3
business days. We are also sending this information to our Quality
Assurance Department to look into."
Regards,
Dennis Stimson
Internet Customer Services Representative>
I received the replacement clamps today (Wed) as promised. Now thats
what I call great customer service!
Ronnie
Leon wrote:
> "shooter" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
> >
> > I received the replacement clamps today (Wed) as promised. Now thats
> > what I call great customer service!
> >
> > Ronnie
> >
>
> Well I am totally a LeeValley fan but that is what I would call Good
> "Recover from a Fumble" Service. Great customer service would not have let
> that happen in the first place.
I think you have that backwards. If there's no mix up, there's no
customer service. There's great order taking, great shipping, etc.
Only when there's a problem does the service enter the picture.
I'm fond of saying that everyone makes mistakes, it's how quickly they
pick up the pieces that makes the difference.
R
Leon wrote:
> "RicodJour" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>
> > I think you have that backwards. If there's no mix up, there's no
> > customer service. There's great order taking, great shipping, etc.
> > Only when there's a problem does the service enter the picture.
>
>
> No, that is not correct. Customer service is getting the order to the
> customer as he expects. It's the whole transaction from the first phone
> call to the delivery of the order. If the customer gets what he expects in
> all respects, "That IS good customer service." Before retiring I worked as
> the GM of an AC/Delco distributer that sold only to GM dealers. We were not
> perfect however I can honestly say that out of the millions of parts that we
> delivered to our customers we made 4 or 5 mistakes a year on average. We
> literally tripple checked every order by 3 seperate people before packaging
> and shipping. We had a big incentive to not make mistakes. If we
> delivered, our driver counted the pieces as he unloaded. That attention to
> detail was a small part of what we considered good customer service.
>
>
> > I'm fond of saying that everyone makes mistakes, it's how quickly they
> > pick up the pieces that makes the difference.
>
>
> Well maybe that is what you have learned to accept. I will totally agree
> however, EVERYONE makes mistakes but good service is seeing that the
> customer never has to call back except to spend more money and good service
> is instrumental in the customer not having to see the mistakes. Fixing the
> mistake is the very minimum level of customer service a company has to
> offer.
Au contraire, mon ferret! You seem to have lumped together internal
order picking procedures with external customer interaction. Different
fleas on the same animal.
Using your definition and logic, anything that improved the company is
"customer service", and that's simply not true. Customer service is
the interaction between the company rep and the customer. This from
Answers.com:
Factors which contribute to Good Customer Service
* Friendly and helpful staff
* Staff with ability to listen
* Appropriate tone of voice
* Approachable staff
* Staff displaying appropriate body language
* Staff with good product knowledge
* How staff greet the customer
* Understanding the customers needs
* Staff with good soft skills
* Wide product range
* Good quality products/services provided
* Long opening hours
* Delivery service (if possible)
Notice the preponderance of people skill and convenience factors?
Those are what customer service is all about.
Filling an order correctly is no more about customer service than is a
company's accounting practices. If the company overcharged your credit
card, is that poor customer service? If they undercharged your card,
is that _good_ customer service? ;)
R
In article <FOj%[email protected]>, Leon
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Don't get me wrong, I think they do a good job compared to most but I don't
> consider a mistake getting out great customer service
I agree. What the OP experienced was customer *satisfaction* as opposed
to customer *service*.
Lee Valley excels at both, in my experience.
"todd" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> "Leon" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:fug%[email protected]...
>>
>> "shooter" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>> news:[email protected]...
>>
>>>
>>> I received the replacement clamps today (Wed) as promised. Now thats
>>> what I call great customer service!
>>>
>>> Ronnie
>>>
>>
>> Well I am totally a LeeValley fan but that is what I would call Good
>> "Recover from a Fumble" Service. Great customer service would not have
>> let that happen in the first place.
>
> Yeah, because you've never made a mistake at work, right? GMAFB.
> Mistakes happen, even to companies with "great customer service". Now, if
> they didn't go back to QA to make sure it doesn't happen again, then I'd
> ding them.
>
> todd
>
I agree, shit happens, it is how you recover from it that separates the good
from the bad.
I bought a Delta table saw from the "real", local, tool crib, (not Amazon!),
a few years back. It was missing the blade wrench. I told the gent at the
counter at 5:00 PM. It was in my mailbox when I got home the next day! Most
companies will not ship anything out the same day ordered after 3:00. How
they got it mailed 300 miles overnight, regular mail, messed up my mind!
Greg
In article <[email protected]>,
RicodJour <[email protected]> wrote:
> Filling an order correctly is no more about customer service than is a
> company's accounting practices. If the company overcharged your credit
> card, is that poor customer service? If they undercharged your card,
> is that _good_ customer service? ;)
Here's a LV example. A few weeks back we replaced all the knobs in our
kitchen. I bought several different ones to take home and choose from.
When I returned them and bought the 24 of our choice, the LV employee
at the till forgot to credit the returns (about $10).
When I got home from work the next day, there was voice mail from her
describing the error and asking me to call her back and let her know
how I wanted the refund dealt with.
Customer service, customer satisfaction.
"Leon" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>
> No, that is not correct. Customer service is getting the order to the
> customer as he expects. It's the whole transaction from the first phone
> call to the delivery of the order.
I this it's how you look at it. Shipping (with the assistance of a few other
departments) is what gets the delivery to the door. I guess some would
consider the whole process to be a form of customer service but to me,
customer service is how fast and how well the company responds when the
customer has a question or a problem.
Recently, I tried out a new ISP service that promised great service. They
got me set up and operating within hours of my request. It was fast and
efficient. That fulfills your idea above of customer service. Over the next
two days, I left four emails to them and three phone calls with questions.
Not one reply. I dumped them on the third day for lousy customer service and
went contritely back to my previous ISP. I realized that customer service
(problem solving) was/is more important to me than anything else, within
reason of course.
"todd" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> By your definition, there are no companies with "great customer service",
> since undoubtedly all of them have made mistakes on shipments. You
> confuse "great customer service" with perfection. The latter doesn't
> exist in this world.
No, I am simply saying that when a customer has to be involved in correcting
a mistake in his order he is not receiving Great Customer service. There
certainly may and will be times when all goes well and he receives his
order as expected. In that instance he has received great customer service.
Me helping a company correct their mistake is NOT what I call Great Customer
service. And yes, I do view Great Customer service with Perfection. No
company is incapable of perfection at least some of the time. With respect
to a company making less mistakes and delivering what a customer expects
the company is that much closer to perfection. Working in the right
direction towards perfection is both good for the company and the customer.
"RicodJour" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>
> Using your definition and logic, anything that improved the company is
> "customer service", and that's simply not true. Customer service is
> the interaction between the company rep and the customer. This from
> Answers.com:
>
> Factors which contribute to Good Customer Service
I visited a farm once. The farmer had the bull service the cow. After
seeing what the bull did to the cow, I was wary of any salesman saying their
company gives good customer service.
On 12 Apr 2006 15:06:41 -0700, "shooter"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>I received the replacement clamps today (Wed) as promised. Now thats
>what I call great customer service!
Yeah, aren't they great? I think they ought to teach classes for
other companies on how customer service is done.
"RicodJour" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I think you have that backwards. If there's no mix up, there's no
> customer service. There's great order taking, great shipping, etc.
> Only when there's a problem does the service enter the picture.
No, that is not correct. Customer service is getting the order to the
customer as he expects. It's the whole transaction from the first phone
call to the delivery of the order. If the customer gets what he expects in
all respects, "That IS good customer service." Before retiring I worked as
the GM of an AC/Delco distributer that sold only to GM dealers. We were not
perfect however I can honestly say that out of the millions of parts that we
delivered to our customers we made 4 or 5 mistakes a year on average. We
literally tripple checked every order by 3 seperate people before packaging
and shipping. We had a big incentive to not make mistakes. If we
delivered, our driver counted the pieces as he unloaded. That attention to
detail was a small part of what we considered good customer service.
> I'm fond of saying that everyone makes mistakes, it's how quickly they
> pick up the pieces that makes the difference.
Well maybe that is what you have learned to accept. I will totally agree
however, EVERYONE makes mistakes but good service is seeing that the
customer never has to call back except to spend more money and good service
is instrumental in the customer not having to see the mistakes. Fixing the
mistake is the very minimum level of customer service a company has to
offer.
"Leon" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:fug%[email protected]...
>
> "shooter" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>>
>> I received the replacement clamps today (Wed) as promised. Now thats
>> what I call great customer service!
>>
>> Ronnie
>>
>
> Well I am totally a LeeValley fan but that is what I would call Good
> "Recover from a Fumble" Service. Great customer service would not have
> let that happen in the first place.
Yeah, because you've never made a mistake at work, right? GMAFB. Mistakes
happen, even to companies with "great customer service". Now, if they
didn't go back to QA to make sure it doesn't happen again, then I'd ding
them.
todd
"todd" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> "Leon" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:fug%[email protected]...
>>
>> "shooter" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>> news:[email protected]...
>>
>>>
>>> I received the replacement clamps today (Wed) as promised. Now thats
>>> what I call great customer service!
>>>
>>> Ronnie
>>>
>>
>> Well I am totally a LeeValley fan but that is what I would call Good
>> "Recover from a Fumble" Service. Great customer service would not have
>> let that happen in the first place.
>
> Yeah, because you've never made a mistake at work, right? GMAFB.
> Mistakes happen, even to companies with "great customer service". Now, if
> they didn't go back to QA to make sure it doesn't happen again, then I'd
> ding them.
Where did you read that? With your response I take it that you are
conditioned to think that a company that makes mistakes should be given the
recognition of having Great customer service because they are fix the
mistake. Again that is simply a Good recovery from a Fumble.
Don't get me wrong, I think they do a good job compared to most but I don't
consider a mistake getting out great customer service. Its simply the right
thing to do to bend over backwards to correct a mistake as they "should" do.
IF you have read other posts concerning this company you will find that not
every one feels that LV has a wonderful record. I have never had a reason
to complain but will not doubt that others have. Like you inferred, people
make mistakes. Great customer service does not include shipping wrong parts
to a customer. The fewer the mistakes, like LV enjoys, the better.
"C&S" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> We also have linemen and installers who bring phone lines to residences
> and
> business. Although they play a huge role in bringing our product to our
> customers, which incedentally happens to be called a "service", I do not
> consider their role to be "customer service".
Really, every one doing his part and doing it well contributes to customer
service. If the linemen and installers worked slowly and or does shotty
work in a customers house the customer would certainly be receiving poor
customer service.
> At least from a business perspective, "customer service" refers to a very
> specific set company functions.
Customer service is every thing that a company does to fulfill its
obligations to its customers. Whether or not the company does this so
elegantly that the customer never notices does not diminish this as an
important offering of good customer service. Every thing that the company
does to catch and prevent the customer from having a problem with his order
before the customer knows about the problem is a part of customer service.
If the customer has to become involved in the correction of a mix up, the
company has let the customer down in this aspect. The very minimum that a
customer can expect a company to do is to Quickly correct the problem and
take measures to see that this does not become a reoccurring event.
Every thing that very every one does to insure that a customer gets what he
expects is all a part of working towards delivering good customer service.
"Upscale" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "Leon" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>
>> No, that is not correct. Customer service is getting the order to the
>> customer as he expects. It's the whole transaction from the first phone
>> call to the delivery of the order.
>
> I this it's how you look at it. Shipping (with the assistance of a few
> other
> departments) is what gets the delivery to the door. I guess some would
> consider the whole process to be a form of customer service but to me,
> customer service is how fast and how well the company responds when the
> customer has a question or a problem.
Yes shipping is a part of customer service and IMO an out side shipping
company is an intergral part of customer service. If you choose a shipping
company with a poor service to deliver your goods to your customer you are
not providing great customer service. Yes, this is a tough call because you
do not dictate how a shipping company conducts its business however you are
the one that the customer should responsable. If the shipping company
delivers sub par performance in delivering your product it is your
responsibility to find one that meets your and your customers expectations.
A good example is the shipping company that Grizzley uses or used some years
back. Many Grizzley customers complained about their machinery being
delivered damaged, and or misshing parts because the carton was no longer
covering the product. There were even reports of tools being delivered and
found upside down when it reached the customers address. You seldom heard
complaints about a specific shipping company, you heard complaints about the
shape that Grizzly products arrived in. That was a Grizzley customer
problem. Today you do not hear about as many problems in this respect.
Grizzly has probably made changes to improve their image. That is working
towards better customer service.
A company responding to correct a problem is simply the least you should
expect from a company. It is but a small part of working towards delivering
good customer service.
Would you rather buy from a company that delivers all of your expectations
and gets its goods to you as expected or one that makes mistakes with your
order and quickly corrects the problem?
I'll go with the one that works harder in the first place to insure that my
order is as expected rather than one that MORE often depends on YOU to help
correct its mistakes.
>
> Recently, I tried out a new ISP service that promised great service. They
> got me set up and operating within hours of my request. It was fast and
> efficient. That fulfills your idea above of customer service. Over the
> next
> two days, I left four emails to them and three phone calls with questions.
> Not one reply. I dumped them on the third day for lousy customer service
> and
> went contritely back to my previous ISP. I realized that customer service
> (problem solving) was/is more important to me than anything else, within
> reason of course.
>
>
"Leon" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:FOj%[email protected]...
>
> "todd" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>> "Leon" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>> news:fug%[email protected]...
>>>
>>> "shooter" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>> news:[email protected]...
>>>
>>>>
>>>> I received the replacement clamps today (Wed) as promised. Now thats
>>>> what I call great customer service!
>>>>
>>>> Ronnie
>>>>
>>>
>>> Well I am totally a LeeValley fan but that is what I would call Good
>>> "Recover from a Fumble" Service. Great customer service would not have
>>> let that happen in the first place.
>>
>> Yeah, because you've never made a mistake at work, right? GMAFB.
>> Mistakes happen, even to companies with "great customer service". Now,
>> if they didn't go back to QA to make sure it doesn't happen again, then
>> I'd ding them.
>
> Where did you read that? With your response I take it that you are
> conditioned to think that a company that makes mistakes should be given
> the recognition of having Great customer service because they are fix the
> mistake. Again that is simply a Good recovery from a Fumble.
By your definition, there are no companies with "great customer service",
since undoubtedly all of them have made mistakes on shipments. You confuse
"great customer service" with perfection. The latter doesn't exist in this
world.
todd
"Leon" wrote in message
> A company responding to correct a problem is simply the least you should
> expect from a company. It is but a small part of working towards
delivering
> good customer service.
I agree ... here is an excellent source that backs up your
contention/definition to a "t":
http://tinyurl.com/ju49u
In short:
Excellent customer service is the process by which your organization
delivers its services or products in a way that allows the customer to
access them in the most efficient, fair, cost effective, and humanly
satisfying and pleasurable manner possible.
I would say that just about covers it, and Lee Valley.
--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 12/13/05
"shooter" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hello All,
>
> Recently, I ordered a few items from Lee Valley, and when I received
> the order, I found they had sent me the wrong clamps for the dust
> collection hose I ordered. I e-mailed their customer service that
> night and here is the reply I received the next morning:
>
> <"We are sorry to hear about the problem that you have encountered with
> the clamps and the hose being in opposite directions in your order. I
> have the hose (03J6506) and the Clamp (03J6606) at my desk and have
> confirmed the problem. I am sending you two Clockwise Clamps (CW),
> 03J6706 which I have confirmed work with the Hose 03J6506. They will
> leave our warehouse Monday and you should receive them within 2 to 3
> business days. We are also sending this information to our Quality
> Assurance Department to look into."
>
> Regards,
>
> Dennis Stimson
>
> Internet Customer Services Representative>
>
> I received the replacement clamps today (Wed) as promised. Now thats
> what I call great customer service!
>
> Ronnie
No big deal - that's their NORMAL customer service - every now and then they
do something REALLY exceptional!
Great company - great products - great service.
Boy! if THAT doesn't get me a freebie from Robin, nothing will. :)
Vic
"C&S" <[email protected]> wrote:
>I work for a small phone company, we have 4 people who make up a department
>called "Customer Service". They do the things you might expect: take
>payments, respond to customer inquiries, complaints and take requests for
>new or discontinued service.
I spent 7 years as a Service Representative in what you call a
"Customer Service" department, so I am quite familiar with the
functions of such a department.
>We also have linemen and installers who bring phone lines to residences and
>business. Although they play a huge role in bringing our product to our
>customers, which incedentally happens to be called a "service", I do not
>consider their role to be "customer service".
For the past 19 years I've performed these functions, also.
Installation and repair, residential, small and large business, data
circuits, and cable repair. Each job involves a phone call to the
customer to verify the need for the visit and confirm access, a knock
on the door, an explanation or discussion of the work needed and
completed, and often a follow up call to verify customer satisfaction.
I and my coworkers are probably the only company "faces" our customers
will ever see.
>At least from a business perspective, "customer service" refers to a very
>specific set company functions.
Apparently, by restricting "customer service" to your office workers,
your company is missing out on providing service to your customers.
Ask Robin Lee if the guy in the shipping department is any less
responsible for providing good "customer service" than the guy who
takes the order. The order taker simply promises the service. It is
the shipping clerk that delivers the service. Both are necessary to
satisfy the customer.
Fortunately my company recognizes this. So much so that I am not
called an installer, a repairman, or a lineman. My title is "Customer
Services Specialist", because my job is not primarily to repair, or
install phone lines to provide dial tone, but to provide service to
the customer.
"Edwin Pawlowski" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:5Sx%f.9698$qB4.7294@trndny07...
>
> "RicodJour" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>
>> Using your definition and logic, anything that improved the company is
>> "customer service", and that's simply not true. Customer service is
>> the interaction between the company rep and the customer. This from
>> Answers.com:
>>
>> Factors which contribute to Good Customer Service
>
> I visited a farm once. The farmer had the bull service the cow. After
> seeing what the bull did to the cow, I was wary of any salesman saying
> their company gives good customer service.
>
Aw, you're just afraid it would be a lot of bull!
:)
Vic
>Yeah, aren't they great? I think they ought to teach classes for
>other companies on how customer service is done.
Won't do any good, too many people don't care how they spend, where they
spend. Just that they can spend. Too much work to use your money as a
weapon to get better service/choice/quality/price. Consumer dept rising
faster then income.
>>I have the hose (03J6506) and the Clamp (03J6606) at my desk and have
>>confirmed the problem. I am sending you two Clockwise Clamps (CW),
>>03J6706 which I have confirmed work with the Hose 03J6506.
I too have been the recipient of great service from LV. The thing here that
stands out in my mind is the "mea culpa". Although it not said explicitly,
I sense a tone of "yup, you're right we made an error".
<Rant-on>
Doesn't it just suck that so infrequently people can't just say "sorry, we
goofed"? I was in to local pharmacy the other day and was over changed for
an item. After the transaction was completed I checked the shelf tag to make
sure, then brought it to the cashier's attention. Instead of "I'm sorry,
we'll get you a refund sir" she just took an annoyed tone and told me to
fill out a refund form.
Is it unreasonable to expect a simple aknowledgement for being
inconvenienced?
I choose not to provide personal information for a simple cash purchase so I
signed with a big prominent 'X'
-Steve
a.k.a. X
--
NewsGuy.Com 30Gb $9.95 Carry Forward and On Demand Bandwidth
snipped for brevity
> > > I think you have that backwards. If there's no mix up, there's no
> > > customer service. There's great order taking, great shipping, etc.
> > > Only when there's a problem does the service enter the picture.
> >
> >
> > No, that is not correct. Customer service is getting the order to the
> > customer as he expects.
> Au contraire, mon ferret!
No need to call the guy vermin, (but I'm sure that was meant in the
cute,cuddly furry sort of way); I'm kind of with Ric on this.
I work for a small phone company, we have 4 people who make up a department
called "Customer Service". They do the things you might expect: take
payments, respond to customer inquiries, complaints and take requests for
new or discontinued service.
We also have linemen and installers who bring phone lines to residences and
business. Although they play a huge role in bringing our product to our
customers, which incedentally happens to be called a "service", I do not
consider their role to be "customer service".
At least from a business perspective, "customer service" refers to a very
specific set company functions.
-Steve
--
NewsGuy.Com 30Gb $9.95 Carry Forward and On Demand Bandwidth
>
> >At least from a business perspective, "customer service" refers to a very
> >specific set company functions.
>
> Apparently, by restricting "customer service" to your office workers,
> your company is missing out on providing service to your customers.
You missed my point. I'm saying that one common definition of "customer
service" is a specific job description.
Sure, we all contribute directy or indirectly to customer's satisfaction.
-Steve
--
NewsGuy.Com 30Gb $9.95 Carry Forward and On Demand Bandwidth
"shooter" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> I received the replacement clamps today (Wed) as promised. Now thats
> what I call great customer service!
>
> Ronnie
>
Well I am totally a LeeValley fan but that is what I would call Good
"Recover from a Fumble" Service. Great customer service would not have let
that happen in the first place.
On 13-Apr-2006, "RicodJour" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Au contraire, mon ferret!
The direction this thread has taken reminds me of a line I heard recently from a
stand-up comic:
'A friend and I got into an argument over the meaning of "semantics." '
Mike