Showing posts with label AXA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AXA. Show all posts

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Let's play telephone tag

Just because you are the biggest doesn’t mean you’re the best.
In fact market leadership until recently has often occurred by default. Big organisations, first to market gain a size and momentum that is almost impossible to stop. Telecom, Vodafone, ANZ, BNZ and TVNZ are good examples. With their market dominance often comes market arrogance, what I call ‘business chauvinism’.
These businesses are often run by accountants and financiers who know the cost of everything and the value of nothing. They become skilled at the end game of economic chess to a point where winning (or making a profit) becomes their reason for being. They lose sight of what being in business is all about (looking after the customer).
Throwing your weight around is no longer a valid strategy for maintaining leadership (as the American auto industry is learning).

So when businesses such as Telecom and the ANZ decide to take their call centres offshore as a way of slashing even more costs they expose themselves to ridicule. I’m not talking about robbing New Zealanders of jobs; that’s another story in itself, I’m talking about turning an already shocking service into a farce.

Taking call centres to countries where English is a poor second language, where the people probably don’t even know where New Zealand is on the map is tantamount to telling customers “we’d rather you didn’t call at all. You won’t understand a word we are saying and we have no idea who you are or where you live anyway.”

The phone is the front gate for many of these businesses and ‘dumbing down’ the service to save costs will come back to bite them in their rears big time. The only good news is that it opens the door to competitors who understand that delighting customers is the key to business success. Energy, telecommunications and banking services have become commodities because the big businesses that dominate these sectors haven’t figured out that they could add value (answer phones quickly and intelligently) and make even more money.

But hold the phone folks. AXA is out of the blocks with an advertising campaign promising to answer the phones locally. Good on ya AXA. It appears some of the big guys can eventually figure it out