The Tao of customer service

The job of a customer service executive is not just to solve a problem, but also to ensure that the problems don't repeat ever again

Founding Fuel

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Dear friend,

Recently, I spent more than an hour at the offices of ShopX, a Bangalore-based startup, building a digital platform for the retail sector. Amit Sharma, its CEO and co-founder, took me around the facility. Our first stop was in front of the customer service section. It was small, with less than ten people. ShopX serves hundreds of channel partners, and tens of thousands of retailers. How does it make do with such a small team? Sharma said it was intentional. No customer wakes up in the morning to say, today I want to experience good customer service. He just wants to get his job done. Customer service comes in because there is some problem with the system. So, ShopX’s aim is to not let those issues come up in the first place. “We don't measure the performance of our customer service team by how fast they answer a call, but whether they take steps to ensure that the same problem doesn't occur again,” he said. To do this, the customer service team works closely with the product and engineering team to go to the root of the problem and fix the root cause.

What we measure matters. In ‘Getting Back to Strategy’, a hugely influential piece in Harvard Business Review, Kenichi Ohmae tells the story of a Japanese home appliance company that was trying to develop a coffee percolator. Reading it, one understands how easy it is to get pulled into a game that our competitors are interested in, but one that customers don't value highly. Do you get into a race with your competitors to make a percolator that brews coffee in shorter time—10 minutes, 9 minutes, 7 minutes and so on—or do you focus on superior taste? The essay is from 1988, but it is as relevant today.

A few months ago my colleague Charles Assisi and I were having a chat with Haresh Chawla, partner at True North. He asked, what's the job of a manager? I thought about it for a few seconds, and answered, to solve problems. He seemed very happy with the answer, but I soon realised I fell right into the trap. He said, wrong. The job of a manager is to prevent problems from happening in the first place. I was reminded of this conversation when I listened to Sharma. The job of a customer service executive is not just to solve a problem, but also to ensure that the problems don't repeat ever again.  

To do that, a business must ensure that the feedback loops between the customer service teams and product, design and engineering teams are fast and strong. The responsibility often lies with the top management. It's about getting back to strategy. 

Interestingly, in these days of Big Data and automation, the biggest distraction from doing that could be technology itself. It's possible to build a bot that understands customers’ complaints and finds a resolution faster than human beings can. In that case, management bandwidth and resources will go entirely to building such a bot which will solve a customer complaint faster and faster—in 3 minutes, 2 minutes, 50 seconds. We might in the process take our focus away from the fact that the customer, above all, wants a coffee that tastes amazingly good. 

The 63rd chapter of Tao Te Ching goes like this:"[The master of it] anticipates things that are difficult while they are easy, and does things that would become great while they are small. All difficult things in the world are sure to arise from a previous state in which they were easy, and all great things from one in which they were small. Therefore the sage, while he never does what is great, is able on that account to accomplish the greatest things.”

Have a good week ahead!

Best,

NS Ramnath

For Team Founding Fuel

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Founding Fuel

Founding Fuel aims to create the new playbook of entrepreneurship. Think of us as a hub for entrepreneurs- the go-to place for ideas, insights, practices and wisdom essential to build the enterprise of tomorrow. It is co-founded by veteran journalists Indrajit Gupta and Charles Assisi, along with CS Swaminathan, the former president of Pearson's online learning venture.

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