Self Service Off the Rails

Yesterday I spent 2 hours climbing in my attic, crawling under sinks and behind toilets in service to my insurance company. Seriously? Apparently to save money my outrageously expensive insurance company decided that I should conduct my own self-inspection using a really shitty app providing them access to the perils of my toilet connections.
This is a version of self-service that is off the rails, out of bounds and an affront to the value I get from any insurance company. By the way, in over 4 decades of paying tens of thousands of dollars for homeowners’ insurance I have never filed a single claim, not one. The reward, go ahead and spend your time doing our job.
If this sounds like a rant, it’s because I’m angry and disappointed in how far businesses have taken self-service. Apparently, today’s business just provides a “thing” whether it’s a product or service they take no responsibility for actually serving their customers. Your app not working, try finding a human to help. Car breaks down and need a tow, you better have signal coverage and the app installed. I think you get the drift here. This all started when we began pumping our own fuel at service stations and has gotten wildly out of control.
I take some responsibility for these practices as a customer experience expert advising clients on how to both be efficient and customer focused simultaneously. Self-service is a tool in the bag but shouldn’t be the only tool.
I’m quite sick of having to download an app for everything in my life. From coffee shops to banking to utilities the world has gone application crazy. Data is the true commodity that every business is selling today, the insatiable appetite for more data has destroyed customer service. The thirst for personalizing every offer through the endless number of apps. On average we have about 35-40 apps installed on our smartphones. That means we carry between 35 and 40 cards in our wallet to conduct daily life. Imagine the size of your wallet. But since these cards are virtual and have no physical footprint, we don’t care, it’s just another icon on a screen.
I hope my point is clear, if a business wants to differentiate itself in a wildly competitive market take a stand and care for your customers with real-time support for your product and service. Self-service or Level Zero support is important for the mundane like password resets but don’t put customers into an endless loop of time wasting to access Level 1,2, and 3 support. Your customer’s time is just as valuable as your time, even more valuable as they pay your bills. Understand that one simple concept and you can differentiate.
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