Categorized | Management

Do You Make Your Most Loyal Customers Furious?

volcanoI have been with Genesis Energy for 12 years. I’ve spent about $20,000 – $25,000 with them in that time. 6 months ago they did something that made me furious, and this morning they did something else. That’s twice in 6 months!

Will they get the next $20,000 that I am likely to spend on electricity in the next 12 years?

(Yes, probably. I’m too lazy to change, and they’re the cheapest)

What made me furious 6 months ago?

I had been receiving my bills by email as attached pdf’s for 5 years (I think they were the first to start doing it). It was an awesome setup. I felt that I was doing my thing for the environment, and it was super convenient.

But that all changed 6 months ago. Genesis announced that they were no longer doing that (which took 1 click to view), they now required this process:

  1. Visit the Genesis Energy website
  2. Have several attempts at remembering your username and password
  3. Click about 3 levels into the account to find your bill
  4. Download the pdf
  5. Repeat this process every month

I complained at the time and asked them to keep my set up as it was. They explained they couldn’t.

Oh well.

What made me furious this morning?

I got an email this morning telling me to sign up for Brownie points. The thing is, I am already enrolled. – FAIL!

Why send this email out to people it is not relevant to? It’s confusing.

Anyway, I thought I’d hit “reply” button and let them know I’m already enroled. But the email bounced because it is “no-reply@genesisenergy.co.nz”. – FAIL!

The “reply” button is the most natural button in the world to press but Genesis Energy has disabled it. It’s like a slap in the face. It says “we don’t want to hear from you so shut up”.

So I clicked on the “contact us” hyperlink at the bottom of the email instead and got this contact form:

genesis-energy-contact-form

What do you notice about this contact form?

There are 11 fields! – FAIL!

How much information do you need from me just to send a friggen email?

Worst of all, the Consumer Number is compulsary so I have to dig up an old invoice to find my consumer number (surely my email address is enough to find me in the system?). – FAIL!

What’s the point of this rant?

My point is this. What are you doing to annoy your most loyal customers?

Is the door to your restaurant sticky? Is it hard to find your phone number on your website? Do you impose a system on your customers that makes it easy for you, but annoying for them?

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This post was written by:

Sheldon Nesdale - who has written 9 posts on Business Blogs.

Sheldon is passionate about marketing for Small-Medium sized New Zealand businesses, and wasting money on advertising that doesn't generate results, makes him really mad. He wants to help you succeed and thrive. If you need fresh eyes and fresh ideas working to improve your business, there is no better person to talk to.


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6 Responses to “Do You Make Your Most Loyal Customers Furious?”

  1. You’re right. I get upset when I have been a loyal customer to telecom for years (again, too lazy to put up with disruption to change over) and they offer great deals to new customers, or those coming over from another supplier, but I have to continue to pay higher prices. Seem a slap in the face for my loyalty to them. Makes me think hard about my regular clients, and looking after them.

  2. Keithw says:

    “..they offer great deals to new customers, or those coming over from another supplier, but I have to continue to pay higher prices…”
    yeah that really gets me as well. So many big companies seem to do that to attract new business, but are saying they don’t give a toss about their existing customers because they probably have them tied into long term contracts, or make it hard to change.

    Loyalty is apparently worth nothing these days.

  3. Catherine says:

    I agree Sheldon this happens all the time with larger companies. However I think that you should leave them and send the correct message. Make the most of the great deals to new customers that other places are offering. I did this recently with Telecom when I had a customer service issue they refused to resolve, the account had been in the family since mobiles existed and they were difficult so I left. A couple of months later we had a rep on the phone asking for the business back. He of course was unsuccessful, if they had been helpful in the first place it never would have happened.

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