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Columnist: A. Blanton Godfrey

Photo: A. Blanton Godfrey

  
   

Service Quality: Still an Oxymoron?

A. Blanton Godfrey
agodfrey@qualitydigest.com

One of the pleasures of writing this monthly column is the chance to rant about things that go wrong. In my March column, "Press No. 2 for Poor Service," I wrote about the frustrations of trying to deal with most service providers over the telephone.

This struck a nerve with readers, and I learned that many of them had experienced service-quality encounters far worse than mine.

In a May 8 Wall Street Journal article titled "In Search of the Operator," Jane Spencer illustrated how bad telephone service quality has really become. Spencer researched the telephone services of a number of large service companies. Her results weren't surprising. The old option of hitting zero to be routed to a human has been eliminated by most companies. They want you to wander, lost and lonely, through voice-mail hell until you stumble on the answer to your question or give up. Service desks for technical support are among the worst. Average wait times are between eight and nine minutes, with waits of more than 40 minutes not uncommon.

Of course, service via telephone isn't the only area that's declined. The American Consumer Satisfaction Index consistently reports declines in service quality of many types. Anyone, like me, who has recently moved from one state to another and dealt with service companies has experienced firsthand just how bad it really is.

The problems start with basic services. We bought a new house with two coaxial cable outlets and two phone outlets in every room. But there was no outside connection to the house. When I questioned the builder, he said he'd given up trying to deal with either the telephone or the cable company. They both subcontracted all their work and changed subcontractors so often he didn't even know whom to call (not that it mattered because they rarely respond). In our case, they showed up after the house was finished, and it appeared they'd have to auger a hole under the concrete driveway to reach the indoor connections. The telephone company solved this problem quickly: A technician simply laid the wire across the driveway and went away.

It took the cable company about three weeks to figure out what to do. Technicians ran the coaxial cable in from the other side, then under the house and up next to the connecting box. Eventually, someone from the phone company returned and ran a trench 270 degrees around my yard to come in at the far side of the house and also go under it to the box.

Things didn't go very smoothly in the kitchen either. We splurged on a fancy refrigerator with door panels to match the cabinets. This involved some cabinet modifications--a process that took four months. When the parts finally came, I stayed home to talk with the installer and ensure that everything went OK. I thought, with our job being his first of the day, nothing would go wrong. Why am I so naive? He arrived an hour late, worked for an hour, and then discovered he didn't have the right type of wood for the cabinets. He had to track it down and return that afternoon to finish the job. Then we called and waited for him to get back to us about leveling the refrigerator, which the original installers had left more than an inch off-level, both sideways and front to back. He told us that leveling wasn't his job. So now we have to call the dealer and wait for someone else.

About a week later my wife noticed the ice maker wasn't working. It didn't take long to find out why when I pulled the refrigerator out: When he'd finished his repairs, the cabinet guy hadn't bothered to hook up the water line. He'd also left all the sawdust and trash from his work behind.

One minor triumph came when we finally--we hope--got the security service from our old home to stop billing us for cancelled service for a house we sold four months previous. My wife's cell phone billing mystery was solved when I noticed that the refund checks we kept receiving equaled the overdue bills they also sent. Evidently they were depositing our payments to the old account and then sending us overdue bills for the new account.

For most services, all people want are clear promises made and kept. We'd like to know what to expect and when to expect it. Our homes should be left as clean after the service as before. The correct parts for a job should be on hand, and the job should be done right the first time. The bill should be correct. It really isn't that hard.

Perhaps the problem lies with us consumers. We've become so tolerant of poor service that we don't hold people accountable. When we do switch service providers, we complain to each other, but we don't take the time to tell the company why it lost our business. Because most companies have no active feedback systems, they also have no information about their true level of service.

About the author

A. Blanton Godfrey is dean and Joseph D. Moore Professor in the College of Textiles, North Carolina State University. He is also the founding editor of Six Sigma Forum Magazine and the co-author of the recently published second edition of Modern Methods for Quality Control and Improvement. Letters to the editor regarding this column can be e-mailed to letters@qualitydigest.com.