Service Recovery Crucial for Customer Retention
Service problems are bound to happen. How do you keep customer service errors turning into lost customers?
The most important factor is trust. According to the American Express Global Customer Service Barometer of 12,000 consumers in 12 countries, 70% of customers state they are willing to give companies a second chance after a bad service experience if there has been a history of previously received good customer service.
Even without a history of prior service excellence, up to 75% of consumers will still put up with two or more customer service experiences before taking their business elsewhere. As we noted previously, this tendency for consumers to give second chances to poor service providers was remarkably strong across all 12 markets surveyed.
What should you do when your employees create a bad service experience for customers? Two key service recover points stand out in this survey:
1) Over half (52%) of customers expect something in return after a poor customer service experience, above and beyond resolution of the problem they have encountered.
2) The vast majority of customers (over 63% in all but one market) want an apology, while roughly half want a credit to their account or some form of reimbursement such as a discount, coupon, or the provision of free products and services.
Providing rewards points was an unattractive compensation option chosen by less than one-third of respondents in each market.
Significantly, 70% indicated a discount would motivate them to return after a poor customer service experience, but this can be a costly way to retain their business. While the average discount that would motivate returning business was low in Japan (7%), it was a hefty 19% to 23% in nine markets.
A more cost effective way to maintain customer loyalty and ensure customer retention would be to simply create a series of positive customer experiences. That beats having to buy repeat business through discounts and free offers any day.
Read our most recent Monday Morning Marketing Memo newsletters for more thoughts on Customer Retention Marketing, or what I call the art of keeping good customers.
