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Windows Vista SP1 Update now available to MSDN, TechNet subscribers, with download links

As noted on the  MSDN Subscriptions WebLog and TechNet Plus… the Windows Vista SP1 update is now available to MSDN and TechNet subscribers. 


Proof that Microsoft does listen and respond. 😉


MSDN



We heard you.

Look for it in the Top Downloads list by end of week, on http://msdn2.microsoft.com/subscriptions

Feb 14 0900 (PDT) – NOW LIVE. Happy Valentines Day!


TechNet Plus- Vista SP1 available for Download:


We have posted the SP1 Update release for download through the Top Downloads section on http://technet.microsoft.com/subscriptions.


[Added 2/15/08]: I just saw that Mike Nash’s post on Mike Nash’s post on the Windows Vista Blog was updated with download links…


Here are the direct links for subscribers…



Tags: Microsoft, Customer Service, Customer Support, Windows Vista, SP1, MSDN, TechNet.

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Believe it or not, customers want to talk to real people when they need assistance

Richard J. Dalton reports in Newsday this past Sunday that customer service industry experts report the “inability to reach a live representative is one of the top complaints of consumers calling customer-service centers.”

I’m sure that it’s right up there with “I waited for I-don’t-know-how-long on the phone to get a problem solved or get an answer to a question and I didn’t.”

Reports Mr. Dalton…

“Norma Freedman received notification in May that a movie from the Columbia House mail-order DVD company would be sent, but she didn’t receive the usual code used to cancel the order. So she did what many people would do: She called the company.

“And, like many consumers calling a customer-service number, she reached an automated service that couldn’t resolve her problem and wouldn’t provide a agent.”

I’ve run into a couple of similar circumstances where I’ve placed a customer service call and not once spoken to a live person. In such cases, I’m doubly sure to note any confirmation numbers I may receive as a result of the call (particularly if I am completing a transaction), as well as the time and date.

For more on contacting support at Microsoft, see this past post. And to contact Microsoft Customer Service, visit http://support.microsoft.com/.

Other support options:

  • Contact your PC manufacturer first if you’re having an issue with your PC. Similarly, contact your peripheral manufacturer for support with one of your computer peripherals (such as a printer, camera, router) if you purchased it separately from your PC. I’ve had great support from Dell and HP as well as other manufacturers. But not, so far, had good success with Samsung’s customer support in the States (‘though I have found that Samsung monitors perform very well).
  • Contact Microsoft – Phone Numbers, Support Options and Pricing, Online Help, and more.
  • Customer Service – For non-technical assistance with product purchases, subscriptions, online services, events, training courses, corporate sales, piracy issues, and more.
  • Newsgroups – Pose a question to other users. Discussion groups and Forums about specific Microsoft products, technologies, and services.

If one of these links don’t address your issue, please visit the Microsoft Online Support Page to start an email support incident.

Tags: Customer service, customer feedback

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Defining customer service isn’t always easy

Amy Conn-Gutierrez has an article in the Dallas Morning News on how companies are struggling in their definition of customer satisfaction.



“Customer service isn’t what it used to be. That’s a lament expressed by many consumers, convinced that a golden age when the customer was always right is long past.

“But that statement is also a fact of life for businesses – and retailers in particular: Customer service doesn’t mean what it used to mean.”


What does it mean to you?


“The phrase [customer service] means everything, and it means nothing,” said Pamela N. Danziger, an authority on consumer insights and author of several books on the shopping experience. “It’s whatever is important to the consumer.”

“Everybody knows it when it’s not happening. It’s like what the court says about pornography. It knows it when it sees it,” said Phil Rist, vice president at BIGresearch, a firm that surveys more than 7,000 shoppers a month for the largest retail trade organization.


To me, it’s knowing that my expectations will be met and (in terms of great service) sometimes exceeded.

Here’s one example: When I visit an on-line bookseller —Amazon, eBay or Barnes and Noble — I expect one experience where I often know what I want. It’s all about finding what I’m looking for and completing the transaction quickly, and then waiting for my product. My questions are usually answered by looking at on-line customer reviews, and sometime via a quick question to customer service (usually related to the transaction or my account).

But when I visit a store, it’s different. Sometimes I’ll be looking for real-time help in locating an item — as in a recent trip to find an abridged Jules Verne novel for my sci-fi starved 9-yr-old — or for the browsing experience with my kids as they look for a new book to read at bed time. (One of the reasons they love the library if for the social aspect, and the exposure to the sheer volume of books available, something that it difficult to appreciate or visualize via a web browser.) 

I appreciate the knowledgeable staff at our local bookstores, just as I do when I am when shopping at the hardware store: I’m buying access to the staff’s experience as much as I buy the product. I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve gone to a bookstore on a mission to get just one book, and left with a bag full of stuff,

Case in point: my recent experience in locating a part for a Samsung monitor: the gentleman working at Lowes Hardware with an incredible knowledge of the parts department found a part almost immediately that I wouldn’t have found (or even known what to look for). When I need something for the house or a tool, most times I head to the store, sometimes after researching the tool on various sites for customer feedback.

Steve Ballmer spoke at Convergence 2007 this past March, and he (like many of our execs) are passionate about improving the overall product and services experience for our customers and partners. I can tell you first-hand that there are fewer people in the highest levels of a company that go to great lengths to solve customer issues and ensure that customers are heard and get the responses they need. At one point in his talk, Steve discussed how we make technology that helps our customers better serve their customers and improve business productivity…


“I’ll tell you a story which really has a profound impact on my thinking about where we need to go with business solutions and applications. I was in Italy late last year, I was meeting with the CEO of a firm called Monte Dei Paschi Di Siena Bank. I won’t try to repeat it too many times, but it is the world’s oldest bank. It was the bank that financed Columbus’ adventure in America. They reminded me.

“We were doing a big project with them, and I was talking to the CEO and he said, you know, one thing that really surprised us, five or six years ago when the Internet was sort of coming  or seven years ago when the Internet was coming into fruition people were telling us we were never going to need branches anymore, everything was going to move online, there was going to be no need for people, customers will completely self-serve. And today we find we need more sophisticated technology in our branches than ever before, and our branches are as important and busy as ever before.

“And I stopped and looked at him and I said, what are you saying? I don’t get it. He said, what we found is we were able to move all of the simple transactions online, but now our employees, the people who sit in the call centers and the branches, and the customers who want to interact with us in those places, they actually have more complex requirements, they’re more complex, it’s more interesting, they’re more valuable. We sell them higher value products. They have more complicated customer service needs.”


So, in a sense, better automated systems and technology doesn’t eliminate the need for a personal relationship or a brick-and-mortar presence, it helps companies with with superior customer service focus on the hard problems while automating the simple transactions.

An for those of you who think that this is a feel-good op-ed piece, I also keep this quote from Bill Gates tacked to my bulletin board:


“Your most unhappy customers are your greatest source of learning.”


In cases where customer complaints are escalated, we try to learn about what we did and how we got into the situation (root cause analysis), and then correct the situation. 

A personal example: for several months, I worked closely on the product side of the house to help coordinate on our response to the challenges brought upon by the changes in daylight saving time. Many of our customers have a diverse set of applications, tools, services and solutions installed throughout their IT shops from a number of suppliers: this added to the complexity of the situation. And we had a number of different areas to respond to, given that different product updates were often required (on PCs, mobile devices, calendaring applications, services…). In short, this was a hard problem.

The feedback and response we received from our customers was tremendously helpful in our planning leading up to the daylight saving time “Spring Forward” (March 11, 2007, in the States), and in our planning on how to address such situations in the future. The customer input has helped improve the tools and updates we deliver, as well as some of our support and update policies.

I’ll spend more time on this in a future post, as I need to tend to a customer here at home: my six-year-old is looking for a glass of water.


Tags: Customer service, customer feedback

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Dell’s direct2dell blog is a year old, and they’ve learned a lot about their customers

Dell’s direct2dell blog is a year old, and the blog’s keeper, Lionel Menchaca, has posted his insight and comments on the last year in the blogosphere…



“While we’ve made progress, I’m not saying everything is where we want it to be. We stumbled out of the gate. Some things went well, others didn’t. We arranged an interview between a blogger and a Dell VP. Through my work on the blog, I’ve had the good fortune to meet bloggers like Virginia Miracle, Jeff Jarvis, Tony Hung, Robert Scoble, John Jantsch, Jeremiah Owyang (who’s someone I continue to learn a lot from). All in all, I think Mack Collier provided a pretty fair assessment of where we are right now.”  


IMHO, it is refreshing to see that Dell’s team on the blog has acknowledged the challenges of maintaining a corporate blog, and took th etime to outline what they learned over the last year:



  • there is power in the voice of customers and their feedback

  • it’s not a good idea to ignore tough issues that come up from customers

  • blogging can be tough and requires patience, balance and responsiveness. Essentially, it’s important to listen and respond to your customers. Otherwise, as Lionel said, “things get out of whack really quickly.”

  • It takes time to build your blog and it helps to have “a thick skin”


  • Consider launching your blog when there are issues. Lionel notes that when they kicked off the blog, they saw 50% of the comments they received were negative, and now a year later they’ve seen that number decrease to under 25% negative.


As many employees with blogs on MSDN and Technet have found, once you open a line of communication up to your customers and partners, they expect that you will respond. I agree that it’ sdifficult to scale customer support through a blog format, and our product groups and customer service teams are always looking at new ways to leverage broad commuications with the people in the various communities.


I’ve heard stories from teams in several groups (including Windows, Exchange and Windows Mobile) how they have made great connections with customers initially through their blog; sometimes, employees will leave a post on a customer’s blog (hey, we read as well as write) to get more information on something someone posts about a Microsoft product.


And with programmes like the ones we run through Microsoft Connect we have a chance to get feedack from customers in our managed beta programmes. As of this post, various prouct teams have fielded 247,505 bugs submitted, received 35,638 suggestions from the more than 1,028,332 Connect members to date. Systems and sites like Connect help us to listen to our customers needs, provide valuable trials and respond. Drawing on concepts such as the one that Dell trialed through their IdeaStorm site, the community already active on Connect could provide their own feedback and ideas for Microsoft to act on.


But if you do it, you have to be prepared to respond to and potentially act on the ideas submitted.



“A big reason why I’m still blogging away a year later is because lots of people at Dell are committed to taking feedback from customers and doing something with it. The action piece is a critical.”


Here here.

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Article: Building Customer Relations by Listening

Interesting article this week from Karen E. Klein on “Building Customer Relations by Listening” in BusinessWeek (Smart Answers June 1, 2007), in which she finds that communication is a foundation of better customer service… sometimes as simply as asking your customers and employees…



“Customer service is one area where small companies can outshine their competitors and cultivate intense loyalty among regular customers. But exceptional customer service goes beyond mere politeness into nuanced relationship building. Diane Berenbaum, senior vice-president of Communico, a Westport (Conn.) customer service consultancy, has just written How to Talk to Customers (Jossey-Bass, 2007) with her colleague Tom Larkin. She spoke recently to Smart Answers columnist Karen E. Klein about what makes a great impression on a customer and where some small-business owners miss chances to wow their clients. Edited excerpts of their conversation follow. “