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Why bad customer service won't improve anytime soon

Why bad customer service won’t improve anytime soon
Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Some of the most hated companies in the U.S. are also .

Much of this consumer resentment . In fact, most Americans have fought with phone menus, desperately seeking a live service agent to seek a refund.

In 2013, Americans disputing a purchase or resolving a problem with customer service.

, we have examined why customer service continues to be so unsatisfactory even at many profitable companies.

Is good customer service unattainable?

focuses on the structure and incentives of various customer service centers to explain why perpetually experience hassles when seeking refunds.

What we found is not encouraging.

Many complaint processes are actually designed to help companies retain profits by who can successfully resolve their complaints.

The process involves a tiered structure in which all incoming inquiries start at "Level 1." Level 1 may be a call center operator who listens to a complaint but acknowledges that there is nothing he can do.

Only by insisting to talk to a manager or threatening to leave the company do consumers come closer to obtaining a refund.

Forcing customers to talk to a computer, circulate through phone menus or sit on hold "while serving other customers" serves the same deterring role as that Level 1 call-center agent.

Why bad customer service won’t improve anytime soon
Credit: The Conversation

Saving money with smart tech

By design, Level 1 agents are to compensate customers.

For example, one Indian call center that we visited forbade Level 1 agents from offering any monetary refunds.

Consumers may have noticed that companies' call centers increasingly use automated chatbots to serve as Level 1 "agents." The caller can talk with a human agent—at Level 2 or even higher—only after the chatbot's AI technology recognizes that a customer is sufficiently unhappy with the process.

These smart technologies determine the caller's level of anger by . If the level of anger reflects a chance the customer may leave the , then the call is transferred to a more experience operator to handle the complaint.

This allows companies to exploit customers' individual differences in age, race and gender so that only the "" are compensated.

Who struggles with bad customer service?

Not surprisingly, . This is especially true for certain segments of consumers above others.

Consumers experience hassles in different ways. For instance, navigating an online complaint process is generally harder for .

Additionally, customers are less inclined to complain than college-educated whites.

United Airlines customer service inspired this video on YouTube.

In addition, than men when dealing with bad customer service.

This all suggests that the tiered process may hit vulnerable groups in our society harder. Therefore, elderly customers and some minority groups will be less inclined to obtain a refund.

Bad customer service doesn't harm profits

It seems puzzling, therefore, to see companies repeatedly pledge that they are committed to great service.

For example, Comcast states that "," but consumers are with their service.

Even United Airlines, whose poor inspired a with nearly 20 million views, claims to offer a "level of to our customers that makes [United] a leader in the airline industry."

But our research suggests that in markets without much competition, companies are more likely to implement a tiered complaint process and profit from the reduced payouts to customers.

This explains why , and consistently receive .

Provided by The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .The Conversation

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