Showing posts with label fashion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fashion. Show all posts

Thursday, April 21, 2011

No excuse for poor customer service

Over the past month two issues have arisen from purchases my girlfriend made. They have been handled in two completely different ways, and should leave one brand completely embarassed of itself.

When we were in New York she bought a pair of Lucky Brand Jeans from their store. She had been looking for a specific pair for a while and fell in love with a pair she found at the Lucky store. This is not her or my first purchase of Lucky product, we purchase a large number of clothes from their stores. She had been trying on two different sizes in the store and when she made the purchase the girl helping her mistakenly put the wrong size in her bag. An honest mistake, but one the company clearly should have a process in place to rectify considering we live in Canada. An email was sent three weeks ago to their online customer service explaining the situation.....and we have not received even an automated reply from the company. Brutal. Disappointing. Unacceptable. We spend hundreds of dollars on every purchase we make from the company and they cannot even respond to a simple email.

In stark contrast to that my lovely lady also purchased a box of General Mills granola bars and upon opening one of them up found a bug inside. Not exactly tasty. She sent a note to the company and within 24 hours had an apology and word that they would send some coupons to her since her product was not up to snuff. She received those coupons within a week and it was essentially twelve dollars worth of free product, double or triple the value of the granola bars she had initially bought.

To this day she still hasn't heard from Lucky Brand.

In a world with the internet you should easily have the facilities in your company to deal with customer issues with your product. People that purchase your brand are already sold on your company and it is far easier to please them and keep them purchasing your products as opposed to finding new customers who know nothing about your brand. So why would you mess around with something as easy as responding to an email???? It boggles the mind. Lucky has stores all across North America and yet they don't have the capability to respond to an email. To me that reeks of a company I no longer want to deal with. Sorry Lucky, you've lost two customers and we will be telling friends of your deficiencies.

Nice clothes are only part of running a business.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Salesperson Species

Every once in a while I have the joy of dealing with a salesperson coming into my company's office and pitching me a new service/product/business. As a result I have been able to determine two major species of salesperson.

Professional Rex

This person will show up dressed sharp. Whether it is the more relaxed salesperson look of jeans with a sharp shirt and blazer or a full out suit this person reeks of someone who is successful at their job. They realize that this life is their profession and your first impression of them is an important part of moving you to a sale. This person will also have done some research on your company, probably by visiting your website. That being said, they typically haven't gone too in depth into your company and can't really talk the talk with you.

Stereotypicus Salespernicus

This guy arrives at your office in a somewhat professional outfit and typically rolls in with a coffee in their hand. They reek.......of smoke, you can smell it from across the boardroom table, seriously. It happens again and again to me. It's shocking and immediately gives off the aura of them being one level below the professional salesperson. Now this isn't to mean that this salesperson is any worse at their job than the Professional Rex, but they have to do a lot more work to do the sale. Also they are usually much less prepared, including not having a business card and choosing to wing the appointment which becomes obvious immediately.

Now there are various categories of salesperson that fall below each species, but that is for another time when i've thought about the various people. I just find it interesting that you can lump the majority of salespeople into these two species. And for reference, if I can smell the smoke on a salesperson from across the table I immediately start to become questionable about the product/service they are selling.