TELECOM Digest OnLine - Sorted: Your Call Should Be Important to Us, but It's Not


Your Call Should Be Important to Us, but It's Not


Monty Solomon (monty@roscom.com)
Sun, 26 Feb 2006 04:11:03 -0500

Under New Management
Your Call Should Be Important to Us, but It's Not

By WILLIAM C. TAYLOR
The New York Times
=46ebruary 26, 2006

PAUL M. ENGLISH never imagined that a pet peeve would become such a
cause clbre. For more than four years, Mr. English, a veteran
technologist and serial entrepreneur, has maintained a blog on which
he shares everything from his favorite chocolate cake recipe to the
best management advice he's received.

But last summer, fed up with too many aggravating run-ins with awful
customer service, Mr. English posted a blog entry that reverberated
around the world: a "cheat sheet" that explained how to break through
automated interactive voice-response systems at a handful of companies
and speak to a human being. He named the companies and published their
codes for reaching an operator -- codes that they did not share with
the public.

The reaction was overwhelming. Visitors to the blog began contributing
their own code-breaking secrets and spreading the word. The consumer
affairs specialist for The Boston Globe wrote about Mr. English, who
is now the chief technical officer of Kayak.com, a travel search
engine he helped to found, and gave his online cheat sheet mainstream
attention. That led to appearances on MSNBC, NPR and the BBC, an
article in People magazine -- and more than one million visitors to the
blog in January alone.

So, this month, Mr. English transformed his righteous indignation
into a full-blown crusade. He started Get Human, which he calls a
grass-roots movement to "change the face of customer service." The
accompanying Web site, www.gethuman.com, sets out principles for the
right ways for companies to interact with customers, encourages
visitors to rate their experiences (the site is to issue a monthly
best-and-worst list), and publishes many more secret codes unearthed
by members of the movement. As of last week, the ever-expanding cheat
sheet offered cut-through-the-automation tips for nearly 400
companies.

"I'm not anticomputer," Mr. English explained over lunch near his
office in suburban Boston. "`I've been a programmer for more than 20
years. I'm not anticapitalist. I'm on my fifth start-up. But I am
anti-arrogance. Why do the executives who run these call centers think
they can decide when I deserve to speak to a human being and when I
don't?"

The Get Human cheat sheet makes for entertaining - and mystifying -
reading. Want to reach an operator at a certain major bank? Just press
0#0#0#0#0#0#. Want to reach an agent at a big dental insurance
company? Press 00000, wait through a message, select language, 4, 0.
Want to reach a human at a leading consumer electronics retailer?
Press 111## and wait through three prompts asking for your home phone
number.

It would be funny if it weren't so depressing - and such bad
business. Countless chief executives pledge to improve their company's
products and services by listening to the "voice of the customer."
Memo to the corner office: Answer the phone! How can companies listen
to their customers if those customers have such a hard time reaching a
human being when they call?

The obvious defense is that it's prohibitively expensive to offer the
personal touch to millions of curious, confused, angry (or even
enthusiastic) callers. The trouble is, companies tend to be better at
cutting costs than at identifying missed opportunities.

Richard Shapiro is president of the Center for Client Retention in
Springfield, N.J., a business that dials out to customers who have
dialed in to toll-free call centers and asks them to evaluate their
experiences. He argues that customers who interact with human beings
are more likely than other callers to volunteer useful information,
try out a new product and come away with a strong sense of loyalty -
positive outcomes that are eliminated by excessive automation.

=2E..

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/02/26/business/yourmoney/26mgmt.html?ex=3D129861=
0000&en=3D1c71138fd05c2289&ei=3D5088

Post Followup Article Use your browser's quoting feature to quote article into reply
Go to Next message: Monty Solomon: "Harvard, Tech Firms Push Data Privacy"
Go to Previous message: Monty Solomon: "Word in the Hand"
TELECOM Digest: Home Page