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The 25 Worst Customer Service Stories to Train the Best CSRs
publication date: Jun 2, 2011
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author/source: Kate Nasser, a.k.a. ‘The People-Skills Coach’ and president of CAS, Inc.
KateNasser.com The People-Skills Coach Read Kate Nasser's
« Respect the Differences and Find the Fit for Team Success!
The Best CSRs Act This Way in Customer Service »
The 25 Worst Customer Service Stories to Train the Best CSRs
by Kate Nasser
The 25 Worst CS Stories. Photo By:mlibrarianus
As The People-Skills Coach and a professional customer service trainer, I use both positive and negative real life stories to train Help Desk analysts, Customer Care teams, Customer Service Reps (CSRs), and Call Center agents. The positive stories define the model of great service behavior. The negative stories address the emotional intelligence team members need to deliver memorable service.
Below are the 25 worst customer service stories of the 40 that I received in response to the question: What is the worst thing a customer service rep ever said to you?
In tough economic times or if your training budget is almost spent, use stories from this list during team meetings to train your CSRs to be the best. As a customer service leader you may be surprised at what you hear from your teams.
If their discussion focuses primarily on the customer's behavior, your CSRs may need serious attention to their customer care
outlook and emotional intelligence. If instead they quickly
acknowledge that the service was far below par, ask them specifically
how they would handle that same scenario. To punctuate the training, ask
each team member to state one step they will take that day to be the best CSR they can be.
The 25 Worst Customer Service Stories
- The foul language is clearly wrong. Will your CSRs quickly identify the other critical error in this exchange?
Here's the story: I had a problem with a new piece of electronic
equipment and called for assistance. The first technician I talked with
insisted that there was nothing wrong with his company's equipment, that
it must be my fault. When I explained that everything in the
network had worked perfectly until I powered the new item up, he laughed
at me. When I asked to talk to his supervisor, he responded with the infamous two letter expletive and hung up. I called back and spoke with a different tech
who was able to resolve the problem in a matter of minutes and who then
asked his supervisor to join us on the line. When I told the supervisor
of my earlier experience, she asked me to give her one day so she could
resolve the problem. She called back in less than fifteen minutes to
tell me that she and the call center manager had reviewed the tape of
the call, fired the original technician, and promoted the second one to a
customer service training position. It went from being the worst
customer service experience ever to one of the best in less than half an
hour.
-Submitted by: Ron B.
- The story: I was trying to get some information from the local cable company, Comcast,
about my bill. I couldn't understand the different groupings of
channels which had no explanation just names like Extended Package. She
couldn't explain it and kept getting the same channels in different
groupings. I said, very politely, "I don't understand your explanation, is there someone else who can explain it to me so I will understand it." She replied: "You're stupid." Then she hung up.
-Submitted by: Elaine B.
- "You're not following our process." Sadly, this was said to a customer by one of my own CSRs. This was a wake-up call for sure.
-Submitted by: Drew J.
- "I'm sorry, but that's our Policy and I'm not connecting you with my supervisor."
This reply is anathema to the reason for customer service - to serve the
customer (the person with the $$$ they want). I could care less about
their policies. My policy is that I don't do business with
companies that don't treat me with respect and give me value for my
money. If something doesn't work, then just fix it. If you don't know -
then say "I don't know, but let me find out for you." Companies are
run by humans and humans make mistakes. I don't judge them badly
because they make a mistake. It's how they resolve the mistake that matters. -Submitted by: David G.
- Can you believe this interaction? Here's the story:
In our large grocery store, I asked about the cinnamon buns that were
in the sample dome. The employee I asked said that they were very
fattening and I could do with losing some weight!
-Submitted by: Andrew F.
- I explained to a DELL rep that I had 12 new laptops that would not power on no matter what I did.
His answer to me was "What do you want me to do about it?" I said
excuse me? He clarified by saying "if they don't power on I can't
trouble shoot them and if they aren't powering on it has to be something you did to them that made them not work."
-Submitted by: Liz M.
I still have nightmares. - "You will have to go online to and fix this." I
replied "Seriously? I am talking to customer service - a real live human
being and you can't do a thing for me? "Yes ma'am, you need to go
online to do this." So I asked her, "What, exactly, do you do?"
Silence.
-Submitted by: Shelly S.
- It's not our fault that you have this problem - it's yours." (Big Insurance Company in the UK)
-Submitted by: Ian T.
- I'm still fuming from my experience with Travelocity/ABC
Airline this morning. Woke up sick as a dog, needing to catch a flight
at 7:00. I've probably booked one hundred flights with Travelocity
and I have always paid the $20.00 insurance if changes ever come up,
including unexpected illness. I have never actually used this insurance
but was happy to have it until I was told from ABC Airline: "I'm sorry,
there's nothing we can do for you." And, then again from Travelocity, "I'm sorry, there's nothing we can do for you." Lesson learned. Don't buy Travelocity's insurance. Or, better yet, avoid Travelocity.
-Submitted by: Anonymous
- Is this stupidity or lack of caring? The story: A pharmacy CSR
refused to authorize one of my meds. When I told her I had been waiting
2 weeks and explained the effects of not having them, she said "maybe
you should see a doctor about these new symptoms."
-Submitted by: Denise C.
- Are your CSRs so busy following scripts that they don't listen? Here's the story: My father passed away. I called a credit card company to cancel his account. I said, "My name is Debra. My father Pat passed away and I am the Executor of the Estate. I am calling to cancel his account."
The CSR replied, "Well, I need to talk to Pat." I said, "Listen
very carefully. He's DEAD - now if you want to talk to him, you'll have
to figure out how to. GIVE ME YOUR SUPERVISOR!" The Supervisor got on
the phone and I said, "Do you have a connection with God?" She cracked
up laughing - she had heard about the conversation. - Submitted by: Deborah B.
- I called HP customer service about a new HP printer
that wouldn't interface with my Mac (even though the company swore it
would easily work). After hours of being on hold and being told that I
had obviously done something wrong or just couldn't understand, the rep
told me "Yeah, really not my problem, lady." So I went to Apple. They
figured out the problem - and were nice.
-Submitted by: Julie G.
- My favorite bad customer service response was "it is working as designed" after the support agent was able to duplicate (and agree with) an obvious bug/error in a popular word processing program.
-Submitted by: Tom M.
- "You should buy one of those bust reducing bras from Marks & Spencers." This was in a clothing store said by one of the stick thin pre-pubescent staff. This is customer service? I don't think so!
-Submitted by: Emma C.
- Is this the new version of customer self-service ?
The story: I was checking out at WalMart, with my elderly Mom and small
kids in tow. A pair of $8 shoes I was buying rang up for $10. I
questioned the clerk on the price at which time she said "No they rang
up for $10. "You can go back there and check it yourself".
I wasn't about to do that, so I just settled up for the $10. grrrr.
Got home and pulled the shoes out of the box and guess what. The actual
price tag on the shoes said $8! Next day I went back to customer service
and happened to be waited on by the same clerk at which time she
said, "That wasn't my fault; it was the cash register. I can't help
you". I had to find the store manager to get the issue resolved. He
not only gave me all my money back, but he let me keep the shoes.
-Submitted by: Amanda K.
- I had spent well over 3 hours on the phone with customer service/tech. support,
having been repeatedly put on hold, transferred, and disconnected. I
called back after yet another disconnection after being on hold for
several minutes. The person who answered started to go into their script,
asking me for irrelevant information. I told the person that I just
needed to be connected to XYZ because I had been disconnected after
being on the phone with them for over three hours. The CSR went to a very long speech about how he'd be happy to transfer me. I didn't need a speech. I just needed him to transfer me. I told him this. He repeated the speech. His scripted, inhuman "courteousness" just made me angry and hate the company.
-Submitted by: Joe S.
- Have your CSRs ever said this? "There is nothing I can do for you." I asked for a supervisor they told me that the supervisor will tell me the same thing!
-Submitted by: Sahar A.
- This one is beyond belief - yet true. Here's the story: I was hosting a party for 150 people and needed catering prices 7 weeks prior to party
to review bids, select caterer, or determine another venue. I had a
drop-dead due date and explained that. When I contacted the caterer for
prices because they hadn't contacted me by the morning of the due date,
my main contact was on vacation and left no information. I was fuming.
Obviously, they did not get my business. When I finally reached the
caterer to determine how they could have made such an error, he said "I decided you didn't need it by your due date."
I was appalled. How could they decide my due date? I did contact the
management office and heads did roll. This was not lost business from
this one event, but there were 5 hosts involved (their friends) and word
of mouth travels fast. While management appreciated my comments, they
were foolish in not throwing me some type of bone to offset the
situation. In a world where it's tough to get business, this is not
acceptable.
-Submitted by: Lisa R.
- "ya wesd rufj dimn uklod doodop" In other words,
the worst customer service ever was delivered by someone who spoke no
comprehensible English. I've heard it hundreds of times to lesser
degrees, but in one case it was entirely incomprehensible. When will
these companies learn that customer service agents need to actually be
comprehensible in the language they are supposedly supporting?
-Submitted by: John B.
- How would your CSRs reply to this request? Here's
the story: I lost my cable service for 3 days. Apparently, it was a
system wide failure and thousands of customers were affected. During the
course of my conversation, I said something like "Please just credit me
for 3 days worth of service." The rep said, "We can't do that. Do you
know how much it would cost us if we credited everyone for the past
three days?"
-Submitted by: Phil F.
- "I am sorry but that's our policy". Even if the CSR says it politely, this is a statement that can tick anybody off. Such a statement exudes rigidity and inflexibility,
which is the last thing a customer wants to hear when he/she calls
customer service with a genuine problem. This statement, if used too
many times by a customer service agent during a call would generally
lead to an escalation or loss of a customer, which indicates the poor performance of the agent.
-Submitted by: Om D.
- Have you taught your CSRs the difference between professional and personal behavior? Here's the story: I was speaking with a customer service representative about a problem I was having. I said, "I know it's not your fault." "That's right. It's not my fault." She is the representative of a company. She should accept responsibility even if it's not her personal fault!
-Submitted by: Randi B.
She said, - Here's one of the recent nightmares I lived through. There was a charge on my Citibank Mastercard
from a vendor who renewed my $400 membership without asking me. I
spoke with the vendor and he agreed to send a credit into the credit
card company for the charge. Since the credit card bill was due in 15
days, I called the credit card company to ensure that I wouldn't have to
pay $400 up front only to have it credited back later. The CSR who answered the phone went into his long drawn out scripted answer. I asked to speak with a supervisor and after waiting on hold, the supervisor started another scripted answer. I said "I am a busy person and I just need a simple direct answer."I am sorry you called when you were busy. We are open 24 hours a day."
I stopped using that card. I will not give my money to a company
whose representatives communicate sarcastically and blame me for their
slow scripted service.
-Kate Nasser, The People-Skills Coach
He replied: " - I had a credit card and somehow after a year the bank changed my zip code and I didn't get the bill. When they called I explained I never got a bill. After we found the issue I asked for a refund of the late fee. Though I got it eventually I was initially told, "You are responsible for your bill, we only send the statement as a convenience to you."
-Submitted by: Shawn D.
- What would your CSRs say if they had difficulty communicating with a customer? Would they sound like this CSRCSR at a big box cable company in the Midwest said to me: "You're not listening to me. "
-Submitted by: Linda L.
who acted as if she was the sergeant in charge. Here's the story: A
The key training topics from this list
include emotional intelligence, customer care outlook, listening skills,
the perilous effects of procedur-itis, ownership, and clear
communication.
I am ready to inspire and train any and all of your employees who work with internal or external customers - your business' most valuable resource!
Just
give me a call and we will discuss the training to deliver memorable
customer service for the greatest return on your investment.
Please feel free to leave your comments or customer service stories
and insights in the field below. If customer service is your passion,
take a look at a related post on this blog "Ace Your Next Customer Service Moment."
Thanks for stopping by and RSS this blog for the latest people-skills posts, Kate Nasser
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As The People-Skills Coach and a professional customer service trainer, I use both positive and negative real life stories to train Help Desk analysts, Customer Care teams, Customer Service Reps (CSRs), and Call Center agents. The positive stories define the model of great service behavior. The negative stories address the emotional intelligence team members need to deliver memorable service. These are the 25 worst customer service stories of the 40 that I received in response to the question: What is the worst thing a customer service rep ever said to you? | |
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