Channel Inconsistency
By Peter DeHaan
When there is inconsistency between
different channel promotions -- Website, call center, and physical
store -- everyone suffers: staff, prospects, and customers. The
result is prospects and customers venting to staff, with front line
employees -- as as store clerks and call center
agents --getting the brunt of this understandable, but avoidable, customer angst.
This point was underscored to me during
recent efforts to upgrade my family's cell phones. My daughter
served as the guinea pig, replacing her phone first. As is
increasingly common, she did her research online and then went to
their store to complete the purchase. The $139.99 phone she
selected had an instant $99.99 rebate and a $40 mail-in rebate; her
net cost was zero. Everything proceeded as expected and the phone
was procured. We thought nothing of the fact that the Website
promotion matched the in-store price.
Giving her stamp of approval for the
phone, a few weeks later we moved forward to replace three more.
Confidently we returned to the store, but to our dismay the price
for that phone had changed. There was no longer a mail-in rebate
and the net cost would be $29.99 per phone.
Discouraged, we retreated home and
returned to their Website. Online pricing had changed, too, but
differently. The cyberspace deal offered a $139 instant rebate,
resulting in a net cost of 99¢. That was acceptable, so I proceed
to place the order, but was stymied by a popup that told me I
couldn't upgrade online; it referred me to a toll free number. I
called. Incredibly, their price was $50. When I mentioned the
online offer, the agent quickly matched it.
A few days later, I called to order the
fifth and final phone. Foolishly, I had not noted the 800 number
given in the popup window online. Instead of repeating a futile
pretense of ordering online just to obtain it, I called the number
listed on my bill.
This time I was provided with still
another pricing situation. My net cost would be $40 to obtain the
same phone. I enlightened the agent on the deal offered two days
prior. She was confused, musing about the different options at her
disposal to provide a more attractive price. She knew she could
reduce my cost to $29.95, perhaps even $20 -- with manager approval
-- but not 99¢.
I mentioned the Website deal and asked
her to match it. She told me she wasn't allowed to do that. "But
the person I talked to on Monday matched it," I implored. Again she
was confused. After additional queries, she was able to clarify the
situation. She was in customer service while the prior person I
talked to was in sales. Sales could match Website offers; customer
service could not. Unbelievably she had a sales quota of two phones
per day. Although she remained professional, I could sense
frustration in her voice and words. Giving me the number for sales,
she was diminishing her chances to meet her quota. I called sales
and bought the phone for 99¢.
Incredibly, the store had one price, the
website another, customer service had a third, and sales quoted a
fourth. Customer service had pricing latitude, but sales had more.
Is that anyway to run a business? Is subjecting front line
staff
to nonsensical pricing and frustrating policies any way to treat
employees? Is it any way to treat customers?
What is desperately needed is channel
consistency.
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Peter DeHaan.
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