←back to thread

325 points jemmyw | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.206s | source
Show context
FateOfNations ◴[] No.45767064[source]
At some point customer service died. Businesses of seem to no longer be interested in dealing with customers. Good customers come in all shapes and sizes, and often don't exactly fit a cookie cutter. It's frustrating to see businesses just cut and run the moment something becomes a problem that needs more than a series of pre-scripted responses to be resolved.
replies(8): >>45767105 #>>45767196 #>>45767259 #>>45767724 #>>45768164 #>>45769243 #>>45771728 #>>45773253 #
silisili ◴[] No.45767259[source]
On one hand, this makes me incredibly sad. It means that all of us, as consumers, agreed we'd rather save a buck than get acceptable service.

On the other hand, as someone who did customer service in my younger years, 95% of calls were PEBKAC, so it's essentially a giant money drain for things of no real concern to you as a company.

I've often wondered how successful it would be to charge $3 or $5 per call, refunding the money in cases said call was needed.

replies(3): >>45767338 #>>45767353 #>>45768393 #
1. CamperBob2 ◴[] No.45767353[source]
In principle I agree with the concept of charging for support and refunding if the issue is not at the customer's end. I'd certainly be fine with that myself, even if it cost $50 or so to get a responsible human on the line when there's trouble with a service like banking, payments, or business-critical SaaS providers.

I think Microsoft tried that at one point, but they didn't stick with it for some reason. Maybe it leads to a lot of knock-down, drag-out arguments about whose fault something is.