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Published byCora Baldwin Modified over 9 years ago
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Customer Service in Dotcoms MS&E 269 Special Presentation Feb. 28, 2001 Team “Just kill it!” Vicki Chin, JC Choi, Ying Mei, Wonhyoung Ryu
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Why is Internet Service Important? Source : Greenfield, 2000
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Number of Online Retail Packages is Expected to Grow Steadily Source : Forrester Research, 2000
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Customer Service is Often Neglected
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Reasons Users Enjoy Online Shopping Source : Greenfield, 2000
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What is your worst online experience ? Company.comWhy?
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Dotcom “Service” – Current Situation Slow speeds Unfriendly user interfaces Security and privacy concerns Broken links Poor content Unanswered phone calls and emails Deliveries – wrong products, long lead time, high shipping costs, handling damage
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Email Response Times Drag On Source: “To Bot or Not to Bot?” Business 2.0, March 6, 2001
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Source : Anderson Consulting, 2000 Online Retailers Are Not On-time
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Why Do Customer Service Problems Persist In Dotcoms? Money - Short term investment mentality - No profit and stock euphoria - Too expensive to implement for small company - Too much $$ spent on marketing for small returns
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Why Do Customer Service Problems Persist In Dotcoms? (cont’d) Suppliers & Partners - Too many suppliers - Weak and small suppliers - No quality control and feedback - Bad coordination with delivery service suppliers (UPS,FedEx,...)
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Why Do Customer Service Problems Persist In Dotcoms? (cont’d) Other Reasons - Customer feedback is hard to get - ARPANet – Internet originally not designed for consumers - Technology maintenance is difficult - Too wide range of customer - Intangible quality & no standard developed
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Is the Internet a Service or a Product? What distinguishes the Internet from Brick & Mortar Companies?
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Approach to Quality in Dotcoms Garvin’s Model –Is the Internet analogous to manufacturing? User-based Approach –Shift of power from retailer to customer –Shift from the Manufacturing-based to User-based Approach
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Dimensions of Quality (Garvin’s Model) Performance –Speed –Checkout time –Delivery time –Ease of use –User interface Features –Content: product info, user reviews –Product variety –Personalization
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Dimensions of Quality (Garvin’s Model) Reliability –Order fulfillment in time specified –Technical reliability –Security and privacy –Stock availability Conformance –QoS on Internet = QoS offline –Same level of service for users of different locations –Standards of Web Design (Cross platform issues)
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Dimensions of Quality (Garvin’s Model) Durability –Lifespan of a Dotcom’s service –Consistency of content and site organization Serviceability –Responsiveness to questions (MTTR) –Ability to serve concerns online –Merchandise returns –Warranty
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Dimensions of Quality (Garvin’s Model) Aesthetics –Site design Perceived Quality –Brand name (real world counterpart) –Word of Mouth –Media coverage, ad banners
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Competing on Quality and Trade-offs Segmentation Strategy Aesthetics vs. Speed –Boo.com Customer Feedback vs. Privacy –Doubleclick.com Features vs. Cost –Kozmo.com Features vs. Reliability –Cars.com
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What are dotcoms doing today to improve customer service? CRM software –ByeByeNow.com Naturalized language searches –Developed by Ask.com, Neuromedia.com Outsource customer service (pros/cons) –LivePerson.com, eAssist.com Survey method improvement Smarter marketing –eCrush.com
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Customer Relationships in the Old Economy vs. New Economy Source : http://zingale.crmproject.com
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Recap of what we’ve said Current situation: –Customer Service is pathetic! Why? –Money, Suppliers & Partners, Feedback, T echnology Quality is often intangible Defined Quality using Garvin’s Model Quality Tradeoffs What Dotcoms are Doing Today
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Suggestions for Improvement Dotcom company changes –Mindset change –Hiring experienced management team –Motivate employees Technical improvements –Security –Speed –Ease of use Suppliers & Partners –Delivery service partnerships –Suppliers (back-end systems providers)
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