Cashiers at a supermarket in Dubai. Pawan Singh / The National
Cashiers at a supermarket in Dubai. Pawan Singh / The National
Cashiers at a supermarket in Dubai. Pawan Singh / The National
Cashiers at a supermarket in Dubai. Pawan Singh / The National


My feedback for feedback-obsessed companies is to stop hounding me for my feedback


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  • Arabic

July 27, 2023

It was only a couple of lightbulbs, a bottle of floor cleaner and, as I headed for a self-service checkout at the supermarket, a cheeky packet of Haribo. Not exactly a downpayment on a car or even something exciting from Apple. Total price: Dh65.

Regardless, by the time I reached home, there was an email inviting me to rate my recent “retail experience”. “Well, the lightbulbs work,” I thought, as I pressed delete.

Then there was a recent “interaction” with an official entity, via mobile app, after which I was requested to rate the service. Ironically, despite my overwhelmingly positive experience, a technical error prevented my smiley-face emoji from being entered into the system.

And more recently, I had a very pleasant online typing chat with what I assume was an AI (apologies to "Darrell” if I’m wrong) about niggling issues I was having with my laptop. All were resolved very quickly.

But then: would I like to rate my customer service journey? Somewhat bafflingly, one of the answers was “comfortable”.

From daily chores to annual car maintenance, monthly haircuts, weekly grocery shops or one-off hospital visits – a near-pervasive feedback culture has insidiously crept into all our lives.

If there isn’t an SMS or email immediately demanding your attention after you swipe your credit card, fear not: almost certainly there will be an opportunity as you walk out of a shop or a bank, or even off an aeroplane, to stab a finger at a screen bearing one of three faces – one happy, one sad and one, I guess, somewhere in the middle. Apathetic? Ambivalent?

I am sure that the big brains in customer service departments around the world believe these feedback interaction points – my term – are unquestionably all a good idea, beyond reproach.

Do I really need to tell an online plant retailer what I thought of my peace lily?

But always, all the time, every time and it becomes pointless white noise, a niggling background hiss to soundtrack our lives. As if don’t get enough garbage in our inboxes.

I don’t want to reflect or pontificate on everything I spend my money on. Do I really need to tell an online plant retailer what I thought of my peace lily? And, of course, inevitably I will also be asked to rate the quality of the delivery company.

The more our lives are lived and shopped exclusively online, the more valuable face-to-face with an attentive and well-trained human assistant has become a thing of the past. Jaime Puebla / The National
The more our lives are lived and shopped exclusively online, the more valuable face-to-face with an attentive and well-trained human assistant has become a thing of the past. Jaime Puebla / The National

This professional spamming of our lives – carried out ostensibly, I assume, in the name of effecting positive change – is the net result of two issues: scale and distance.

There is no way for, say, the large tech companies, with a combined loyal customer or user base numbering in the hundreds of millions, to have enough human beings on standby to deal with every qualm and quibble.

Outsourcing queries to AI bots is one solution, albeit still inelegant and with a broad spectrum of success, but another is to simply and cheaply request that feedback directly, from the source.

Even if only a tiny percentage of people respond to emails, SMSs and online surveys just a small amount of the time, the result is still a huge data set on which these companies (you would hope) act.

But it is exactly those companies with the worst customer service reputations – and you know who you are – who are often the most enthusiastic in their requests for feedback.

Bad reputations are easily won and difficult to lose, especially when tangible improvements are evidently never made, leaving respondents with the bitter aftertaste of time wasted.

So, not only do these litmus surveys become tedious to consumers, but they also have the opposite of the desired effect: by trying to engage with the people who spend money with you, you are actually alienating them more.

As for the distance issue, quite simply the more our lives are lived and shopped exclusively online, the more valuable face-to-face with an attentive and well-trained human assistant has become a thing of the past.

“The customer is always right” is a very hard maxim to operate by when all a company knows about you is your email and shipping addresses and prior shopping habits.

But if feedback forms and emails are considered the only way to bridge these divides, an argument can easily be made for an urgent rethink.

What that solution is, I don’t know – I am not a customer service professional. What I am is a typical consumer who would happily never receive another message telling me “My Feedback is Important”.

Anyway, now you’ve reached the end of this column, how would you rate your reading experience?

The years Ramadan fell in May

1987

1954

1921

1888

The five pillars of Islam

1. Fasting

2. Prayer

3. Hajj

4. Shahada

5. Zakat 

ARSENAL IN 1977

Feb 05 Arsenal 0-0 Sunderland

Feb 12 Manchester City 1-0 Arsenal

Feb 15 Middlesbrough 3-0 Arsenal

Feb 19 Arsenal 2-3 West Ham

Feb 26 Middlesbrough 4-1 Arsenal (FA Cup)

Mar 01 Everton 2-1 Arsenal

Mar 05  Arsenal 1-4 ipswich

March 08 Arsenal 1-2 West Brom

Mar 12 QPR 2-1 Arsenal

Mar 23 Stoke 1-1 Arsenal

Apr 02  Arsenal 3-0 Leicester

The burning issue

The internal combustion engine is facing a watershed moment – major manufacturer Volvo is to stop producing petroleum-powered vehicles by 2021 and countries in Europe, including the UK, have vowed to ban their sale before 2040. The National takes a look at the story of one of the most successful technologies of the last 100 years and how it has impacted life in the UAE.

Part three: an affection for classic cars lives on

Read part two: how climate change drove the race for an alternative 

Read part one: how cars came to the UAE

PROFILE OF SWVL

Started: April 2017

Founders: Mostafa Kandil, Ahmed Sabbah and Mahmoud Nouh

Based: Cairo, Egypt

Sector: transport

Size: 450 employees

Investment: approximately $80 million

Investors include: Dubai’s Beco Capital, US’s Endeavor Catalyst, China’s MSA, Egypt’s Sawari Ventures, Sweden’s Vostok New Ventures, Property Finder CEO Michael Lahyani

The essentials

What: Emirates Airline Festival of Literature

When: Friday until March 9

Where: All main sessions are held in the InterContinental Dubai Festival City

Price: Sessions range from free entry to Dh125 tickets, with the exception of special events.

Hot Tip: If waiting for your book to be signed looks like it will be timeconsuming, ask the festival’s bookstore if they have pre-signed copies of the book you’re looking for. They should have a bunch from some of the festival’s biggest guest authors.

Information: www.emirateslitfest.com
 

Updated: July 27, 2023, 12:00 PM`