The Customer is Always Right
There is a saying in retail that goes “The customer is
always right.” This is true up to a point. The saying should go “The customer
is always right until the customer is wrong.”
Sometimes we, as customers, ask companies to do things that
we know are outside of their policy, but we hope that they will see that we
would be better off and happier customers if they would bend that policy. I can
think of two such cases from my recent past. The first involves an air mattress
that did not hold air. I had purchased it at Walmart. The Walmart policy on air
mattresses is that they will exchange but not refund the money. I had decided
that since one would not hold air that I would not try another. Walmart agreed
with me and refunded my money. This made me happy.
A second situation involved the local Radio Shack. I had
taken my phone and battery into the store so that I could be sure of getting
the right battery. The store did not have the right battery, so they ordered it
for me. I picked up the battery and took it home only to learn the battery
would not fit my phone. The Radio Shack closes at 6 PM and I very rarely have
an opportunity to get by before that time. So, try as I might, I could not make
it to Radio Shack when they were open for a while.
Finally, I was able to make it to the Radio Shack. I had my receipt.
I had the package. I had the battery, but it was a few days longer than their
return policy allowed for. They refused to refund my money. In this case, I
knew that I was outside of the return period, but it would have endeared them
to me if they had bent the policy.
There are times, though, in retail when we find that the
customer is clearly wrong. The first year my family owned the Western Auto
Store, a man came by our house on Christmas Day demanding my father open the
store and refund his money for a toy that did not work. The toy had a K-Mart
price sticker on it. My father refunded his money anyway.
Marshall Fields, the legendary Chicago merchant, is said to
have been walking the floor of his store one day when he came upon a clerk and
a female customer in a heated argument. Fields asked the clerk what he was
doing to which the clerk replied that he was settling a customer complaint.
Fields replied “No you are not; give the lady what she wants (Chicago
Architecture Foundation, 2011).”
Nordstrom’s, the upscale clothier, is legendary for
outstanding customer service. Store legend lists an example of when a man
walked into a Fairbanks, Alaska Nordstrom’s store and placed a set of snow
tires on the counter and demanded a refund. The clerk saw that the price tag on
the tires showed $15, so he reached in the drawer and refunded the man his $15.
The store had never sold tires (Janet, 2011).
Here the customer is clearly wrong, but the store took care
of them anyway. However, there are sometimes situations when the customer is so
wrong that it is impossible to help them. A situation that occurred the other
day brought this back to mind. There are some customers that are set on having
things their way and on running over other people.
A woman came into the small convenience store I was at and
threw $5 down on the counter and said “He’s gonna get $5 worth of gas.” The
pump had already been authorized, so that meant that the man would have to stop
at $5 himself. Otherwise he would go over the amount she had paid for. Since he
had not started pumping, he could have hung the pump up and then I could set it
to stop at $5. I told her she could have him hang the pump up or have him stop
at $5.
The woman became very belligerent. She uttered a torrent of
profanities which included multiple uses of God’s name in vain. She said, “I am
not going to do your job for you.” She went on to say she would not shop in the
store again. To this I had to reply, “We appreciate that.” In this case, the
woman’s business was not worth the hassle she caused. It was not worth the
disruption she caused other customers. In short, the customer was wrong and her
business was not worth the problems she caused.
A business has to have a policy that is fair to its
customers, yet equally fair to the employees. When a customer makes excessive
demands or is verbally or otherwise abusive to an employee, the business’s only
recourse is to stand behind the employee and fire the customer. No one’s
business is so important that it gives them carte blanche to abuse employees. A
company has to believe this and fire the customer if need be. There are times when
a customer is simply venting and the employee needs to understand this and
allow the customer to do so without taking it personally.
Bibliography
Chicago Architecture Foundation. (2011, February
22). Give the lady what she wants. Retrieved from Around Chicago in 85
Tours: http://www.85tours.com/2011/02/give-lady-what-she-wants.html
Janet, B. (2011). The Customer Is Always Right.
Even When They Are Positively Wrong . Retrieved from The Customer Is
Always Right. Even When They Are Positively Wrong :
http://www.afunzone.com/ATopic/The_Customer_Is_Always_Right_Even_When_They_Are_Positively_Wrong.htm
Disclaimer
The opinions or advice listed in this blog or website should be used as a place to start only. It is not a substitute for the use of a professional.
Please be sure to consult your attorney and/or accountant with any specific questions.
There is no one right answer to any business question that will cover all circumstances.
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