Customer Service Information

Businesses Need to Rehumanise


Big companies and corporations have lost the human touch. The question is, when will humanity catch on, or like robotic sheep will we do whatever the business shepherds tell us, no matter how bad we are treated? I am talking from firsthand interaction here. Aren't you tired of having to talk to machines and sit waiting in queues that may not even really exist, while horrible music repeats itself over and over for eternity? How about having to talk to person after person as they try to find someone else who 'can' do the task that you need done? What about the machine that tells you to speak into the phone but can never properly interpret what you are saying? Or pushing buttons, how many numbers have you had to push before finally being told that the section you are looking for is vacant? Vacant, how about the humans you do finally get in contact with but for some strange reason know less about their job than you do?

I may sound pessimistic but I truly believe that human society is meant to evolve differently from this path of customer numbers and automatically generated notices. We are intelligent creatures, well, in many ways, and I just wonder why we haven't created systems for our own society that are more conducive to making our community a happier place to live in. I am definitely not against technological, financial, and material progress, but I do question the intentions of our corporate institutional leaders. It seems that as long as the person at the top of the hierarchal food chain's paycheck keeps increasing at a steady rate, customer service is no longer a priority. But then again, I reckon if the CEO of an insurance company has problems with their telephone line, they'd probably have the problem fixed in no time, as they have a direct line to the telecommunication CEO from one of the card-swapping sessions at their $500-a-head luncheons.

The thing that these leaders of society have forgotten is that without normal, average human customers, their empires would be quickly reduced to dust. I think one of the problems lies with us, those average people. The companies are so big and powerful that we have become apathetic, feeling that we are too small and insignificant to question their systems of interaction. We simply let them dictate how things work and go through all the rigmarole and red tape no matter how much it frustrates us. There was a time, and you can still find this in most small companies, when customers were treated with respect and as equals. "The customer is always right." This statement used to be very normal when discrepancies came up in our business practices. Now however, the customer is often treated as guilty before innocent, as if the average 'small' person is just a criminal who wants to leech off the righteous and just institutions.

The truth is, if we all stand together on an issue, human beings have been known to move mountains. Why don't we speak out and get these companies who spend so many millions of dollars on commercials telling us how friendly and helpful they are to be accountable for their actions? They could take some of those same millions and put them into employing more human beings to act as communicators, as well as informed positions that solve problems quickly and easily. More jobs for the community in general, and a more enjoyable life for all coming in contact with the companies in question: this is a win/win situation people! Happier customers who are being respected as equals means people will tell each other of the quality of the business; of course this equates to more customers, which means more profit for all.

The time has come to 'rehumanise' (cool word!) our social and business systems. Communication is always spouted as being the key to a positive relationship between family, friends, and lovers. We now need to adopt this model for how organizations and institutions relate to the wider community that actually created them with their investment, employment, and customer base. We all need to realize that we are all worthy and deserved of happy lives, lived via a construct of social systems that focuses on real human satisfaction.

Jesse S. Somer
M6.Net
http://www.m6.net
Jesse S. Somer is a human, not a customer number, and definitely not a faceless commodity.


MORE RESOURCES:

How to Mix the Right Technology and People to get Quality Customer ...
eWeek,  NY - 3 hours ago
For Internet retailers, having friendly, knowledgeable customer service agents available to customers 24/7 can lead to a sustainable competitive advantage. ...
Contact Centers Gain Flexibility to Meet Customer Needs Through ... MarketWatch
Communications and Financial Services Companies Lead Other ... CNNMoney.com
Contact Center Study Identifies Strengths and Weaknesses TMCnet
all 20 news articles


Home-Based Customer Service Agents Save Average of $24000 per Year ...
MarketWatch - 15 hours ago
ALEXANDRIA, VA, Jul 23, 2008 (MARKET WIRE via COMTEX) -- Sending customer service agents home through homeshoring can result in individual savings of ...


Bausch & Lomb puts new CIO in charge of customer service
ZDNet - 12 hours ago
Eye care company Bausch & Lomb has given its CIO the customer service reins. On Wednesday, the company named Alan Farnsworth, senior vice president of ...


Managed Systems Raises the "Level" on Customer Service for Small ...
MarketWatch - 16 hours ago
NEW YORK, NY, Jul 23, 2008 (MARKET WIRE via COMTEX) -- Managed Systems, Inc., delivering proven IT solutions to SMBs, today announced its partnership with ...


Bausch & Lomb Names Alan Farnsworth as Senior Vice President of ...
MarketWatch - 14 hours ago
In this newly created position, Mr. Farnsworth provides leadership for the company's global delivery of customer service processes, as well as for the ...


Corporate Research International Reveals Best Customer Service
MarketWatch - 18 hours ago
Respondents were asked to rate their perception of each business's customer service on a scale of 1-10, with 10 being the highest rating. ...


Coinstar moves customer service center to Kennewick
Mid Columbia Tri City Herald, WA - 15 hours ago
The Bellevue-based company, which provides self-service coin-counting machines and self-service DVD rental kiosks, will relocate its customer service center ...


Study Finds Retailers Give Back Supply Chain Efficiency to Improve ...
PR Web (press release), WA - 28 minutes ago
... and managing these new challenges, but are willing to increase inventory and reduce that efficiency in order to improve customer service levels. ...


Customer Service, the key to success
Practical Ecommerce (subscription), Grand Junction - 1 hour ago
Let’s face it; customer service is not what it used to be. On a recent shopping trip to a well known store I asked an associate where I could find a ...


PWC breaks ground on customer service center
FayObserver.com, NC - 16 hours ago
By Don Worthington The Fayetteville Public Works Commission broke ground this morning on a new customer service center. The 10000-square foot facility is ...

Customer-Service - Google News

home | site map
© 2006