Sometimes
the ideas for a blog just land on your desk without any effort. This time, all
the effort was made by one of the world’s largest fast moving consumer goods
companies with 355.000 employees worldwide.
But this is
not a guarantee for smart process and data management as the next experience
from yours truly will illustrate.
The Anamnesis
One rainy
day, the tenth of May, I receive a mail piece with a nice promotional offer: buy a coffee machine
for one euro while you order your exquisite cups online. On rainy days you take
more time to read junk mail and sometimes you even respond to them. So I surfed
to their website and filled out the order form. After introducing the invoice
data (VAT number,invoice address,…) an interesting question popped up:
Is your delivery
address different from your invoice address?
As a matter
of fact it was, it was the holiday season and the office was closed for a week
but I was at a customer’s site and thought it would be a good idea to have it
delivered there.
So I ticked
the box and filled in the delivery address.
That’s when the horror started.
Because,
when I hit the order button, there was no feedback after saving, no chance to
check the order and wham, there came the order confirmation by e-mail.
Oops: the
delivery address and the invoice address were switched. Was this my fault or a
glitch in the web form? Who cares, best practice in e-commerce is to leave the
option for changing the order on details and even cancelling the order, right?
Wrong. There was no way of changing the order, all I could do was call the free
customer service number to hopefully make the switch undone.
10th May, Call to Consumer
Service Desk #1
IVR:
“Choose 2 if this is your first order”
Me: “2”
Client
service agent: “What is your member number?
Me: “I
don’t have member number since this is my first order. It’s about order nr
NAW19092… “
Client
service agent: “hmmm we can’t use the order number to find your data. What is
your postcode and house number?”
Me: “This
is tricky since I want to switch delivery address with the invoice address. You
know what, I’ll give you both”.
Client
service agent: Can’t find your order”
So, I am
completely out of the picture: not via the company, the address, the order number,
let alone a unique identifier like the VAT number
Client
service agent: “Please send a mail to our service e-mail address “yyy@zzz.com”.
Me: “Send
e-mail” Result: no receipt confirmation, no answer from this e-mail address.
Great customer experience guys!
10th May Call to Consumer Service Desk #2
Client
service agent: “Oh Sir, you are calling the consumer line, you should dial YYY/YYYYYY
for the business customers”
Me:" But
that’s the only phone number on your website and the order confirmation???!!!"
10th May 2 PM Call to Business customer service #3
Client service agent: “Let me check
if I can find your order”… (2’ wait time) “Yes, it’s here how can I help you?”
Me: “I want to
switch the invoice with the delivery address”
Client service agent“OK Sir,
done”
11th May: The delivery service provider sends a message the delivery is due on the original address from the order.
No switch
had been made…
Call to DPD? Too late.. these guys were too efficient...
The Diagnosis, What Else?
Marketing
didn’t have a clue about the order flow and launched a promotion without an
end-to-end view on the process which resulted in a half-baked online order
process: no reviewing of the order possible, no feedback and the wrong customer
service number on the order confirmation.
Data
elements describing CUSTOMER, ORDER and PRODUCT may or may not be conformed
(from the outside hard to validate) but they are certainly locked in functional
silos: consumers and companies.
Customer
service has no direct connection to the delivery process
The
shipping company (DPD) provided the best possible service under the
circumstances.
And this is
only a major global player! Can you
imagine how lesser Gods screw up their online experience?
Yes, it can
get worse!
One of my
clients called me in on a project that was under way and was seriously going
south.
What
happened? The organisation had developed
a back office application to support a
public agenda of events. As a customer of this organisation you could contact
the front desk who would then log some data in the back office application and
wrap up the rest of the process via e-mail. Each co-worker would use his own “data
standards” in Outlook so every event had to be handled by the initial co-worker
if the organisation wanted to avoid mistakes. No wonder some event logging
processes sometimes took quite a while when the initiator was on a holiday or on
sick leave…
A few months
later -keep that in mind- the organisation decided to push the front desk work
to the web and guess what? Half the process flow and half the data couldn’t be
supported by the back office application because the business logic applied by
the front desk worker wasn’t analysed when developing the back office app.