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Xbox 360 repairs are complete: our first unit comes home

It’s returned home.


Our Xbox 360 that suffered from a severe case of the dreaded three red flashing lights arrived on Friday and is now up and running.


Well, not exactly the same Xbox 360: we were informed that the unit we received was a replacement unit, but it’s in fine shape. (Let’s hope that this one doesn’t scratch game discs.)  All told, we waited about five weeks from the first call to the Customer Service centre to this week when UPS showed up with a plain white box.


Not that anyone missed the gaming system today: it was a gorgeous day with baseball, bike rides and much more filling the schedule until late this evening. We had just one session of Dance Dance Revolution on Friday before the kids headed to bed.


What else was in the box: instructions included with the unit were helpful, and it was nice to receive a letter from the Xbox team (in English and Spanish, thank you) apologizing for the issue.  And the bonus of a free month of Xbox Live that many people called out in mail to me was included in the return shipment.


Which is a wash as the unit was out of service for just over a month.


Update on another unexpected bonus: as you may have seen in an earlier post, our older Xbox 360 just went south (a month after the standard one year warranty expired). Good news is that I purchased with a credit card that automatically extended the standard manufacturer’s warranty by one year. That means the $99 repair fee should be covered… a small victory and good reason to keep that plastic.  So check your card agreements and see if you’re covered (some exclusions always apply).


Case in point: I saw recently that Costco extends the manufacturer’s warranty on new computers and televisions to two years from date of purchase. But Costco does not, it seems, extend this offer to video game consoles.


Tags: Xbox 360, customer support.


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The Customer Experience is Not a Commodity

Jennifer Laycock is the Editor of Search Engine Guide, a site that helps small business owners get the gist of search marketing, and author of “The Small Business Guide to Search Engine Marketing” and of the free “Zero Dollars, a Little Bit of Talent and 30 Days” series. She is also the author of an article this week, The Customer Experience is Not a Commodity, in which she notes “online shoppers conduct more than half a dozen searches before making a purchase,” and that it’s not just price but the customer experience.

She notes her own experience at a local bakery-sandwich shop, Panera Bread, that has secured her loyalty by ensuring that she has a great experience at their store whenever she visits… even though there are more convenient locations closer to her…

“At “my” Panera Bread, they know me by name. On my second visit, Erin was taking my order and observed that I’d been there “for hours” that past Tuesday. I told her I drop my kids off at day care and come over with my laptop to work for a few hours. She got my bagel for me and I went on my way. The next visit, we chatted again as she asked me if I was working on a paper for school. I told her what I did for a living and she commented that it sounded interesting. Over the course of the next two months, Erin and Stacy continued to make conversation with me whenever I was placing an order. They even noticed when I came in on a Friday instead of my usual Tuesday and Thursday and when I ordered something other than my usual.

“When I stopped by on Wednesday with a friend to pick up an order to go, they commented on how great it was that I was taking a break and wanted to know about where we were headed to shop. Two workers at a chain store that I thought had secured my loyalty to the Panera Bread brand.

After she had a less-than-enthusiastic outing at another Panera, she noted how she missed her Panera Bread. It didn’t matter that the closer shop offered the same product and admittedly a nicer setting, the one that was “her Panera bread” made the extra effort and secured her business.

In other words, “her Panera Bread” jumped through hoops for their customer, and found great success in the process, gaining a loyal customer, earning great word of mouth advertising and possibly received some great advice on web site marketing. 😉

Think about how your customers see you.  I get some of the best feedback whilst visiting the local computer and electronic stores, especially when people have no idea I work at Microsoft.  People are brutally honest and open with strangers in the oddest places, such as in the check out line, looking at PCs or TVs (you’d be surprised).  

And remember what it’s like to be a customer of your own company. 

I purchase Microsoft products at retail (like my Xbox 360 and various games, as well as third party hardware and software), and learn so much from customers and sales people, particularly their impressions of Microsoft products.  I talk to enterprise customers, businesses and regular consumer who use our products and services, listen to their experiences (often with product teams and field staff), and pass the info on to the right teams when there’s something to note.  And when something goes south or I run into a product issue of my own, I use our customer support offerings, and ultimately send feedback (good and bad) to our support management. 

Benjamin Franklin and Dale Carnegie both said that “any fool can criticize, condemn, and complain – and most fools do.” But if you listen to the criticism and respond to it — take the criticism and do something positive with it — then you can course correct and improve the customer experience.

Tags: Customer service.

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Make your customers feel like they are your top priority

Crystal Dupré is publisher of The Meridian Star in Meridian, MS, and wrote an op-ed piece for the paper today on “Customer service at its finest.” 


“This experience got me thinking: what did these two people do to make the service they provided seem so out of the ordinary? The answer was obvious and simple: they focused their attention on me, the customer. They weren’t preoccupied with chatting with co-workers. They didn’t see me as an interruption of their work. They didn’t act as though they were simply going through the motions without emotion.

“Instead, they acted as though they were really happy to help me. They made me feel as though I was their top priority. They looked me in the eye and sincerely thanked me for giving them the opportunity to shine.”


As you get ready for the week, think about the genteel attention paid to customers in East Central Mississippi, and perhaps how it might impact your own customer interactions.


Want to share your own customer service stories?


And if you want to provide your own feedback on good and bad experiences, to Dennis Rockstroh asked readers today in his San Jose Mercury News column to “send in your highs, lows with customer service.” He related a reader’s concern that customer service representatives at one firm are not to release their last names when dealing with a complaint.


MTCW: perhaps, they give it out freely when they receive a compliment. 😉



“Anonymity, like secrecy, too often leads to abuses.


“What kind of changes would you like? What do you think of the state of customer service today?”


You can send your feedback in directly to Mr. Rockstroh for “your experiences, good or bad…”


I can think of a few things. I sent him a link to Ms. Dupré’s column today, in addition to a couple of my own SiValley rant and raves.

[Added 081507: you can also read Mr. Rockstroh’s Consumer Action blog here]

Tags: Customer service.

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Seattle Times: a look at some of the best and worst in customer service

Today in the Seattle Times, Charles Bermant writes about the best and worst in customer service. He writes…



“… that some companies actually know how to respond electronically. And those who do so might not be the ones you would expect.”


Specifically, he describes his experience with his mobile operator as well as a friend’s experience with Shop-Vac…



“We have, however, examples of the best and worst. Ironically, this round finds a consumer-level garage appliance beating the pants off a major cellular provider.


I’m not surprised.


Some of the best customer service, I’ve found, comes in the seemingly lowest-of-tech companies and services… such as great hotels (where the best use the latest technology to know as much about their customer’s needs as they do to prepare their detailed bills with any number of arcane charges and taxes), popular restaurants and successful retail stores.


But I see that same spirit across many of the product groups at Microsoft, too. Whether it’s one of the staff in a product team with a popular blog or a group managing an early adopter programme on Connect, many employees and groups go out of their way to help customers and partners. Many groups run their efforts like their own businesses, meeting with customers to better understand their needs, working along side customers as they deploy and use products, and providing applicable feedback (often in one to many forums, as lots of people will run into the same issues).    


Entrepreneur magazine has an article that looks at the best customer service ideas from (way back) 1999, ones that are truly timeless…



  1. Hire The Right People.

  2. Make Service A Core Value.

  3. Empower Front-Line Employees.

  4. Solicit And Use Feedback.

  5. Pick The Right Customers.

Continues the article…


“Perhaps your first move, Berry says, should be to institute a formal measurement system to calculate the true costs of mediocre service. “If business owners take the time to properly measure the revenue lost to customers who left due to poor service and the extra costs involved in reperforming a service that wasn’t performed properly the first time, the number they come up with will be so large, it will never again be an issue as to whether service quality is important in their company,” promises Berry. “It’s instant religion.”


Food for thought.

Also of interest, Inc. Magazine’s Best Customer-Service Practices, a collection of links to interesting and helpful articles.

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