In its earliest days, Zappos fulfilled orders with drop shipments: We didn't carry any inventory; instead we relied on shoe manufacturers to ship products directly to our customers. That system never worked very well.
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As an e-commerce company, we should have considered warehousing to be our core competency from the beginning. Trusting that a third party would care about our customers as much as we did was one of our biggest mistakes.
If we hadn't reacted quickly by starting our own warehouse operation, that mistake would eventually have destroyed Zappos.
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If we were serious about building our brand around being the best in customer service, customer service had to be the whole company, not just a single department.
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On many websites the contact information is buried at least five links deep, because the company doesn't really want to hear from you. And when you find it, it's a form or an e-mail address. We take the exact opposite approach. We put our phone number (it's 800-927-7671, in case you'd like to call) at the top of every single page of our website, because we actually want to talk to our customers. And we staff our call center 2417.
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At Zappos we don't hold reps accountable for call times. (Our longest phone call, from a customer who wanted the rep's help while she looked at what seemed like thousands of pairs of shoes, lasted almost six hours.) And we don't upsell- a practice that usually just annoys customers.
We care only whether the rep goes above and beyond for every customer. We don't have scripts, because we want our reps to let their true personalities shine during every phone call, so that they can develop a personal emotional connection with each customer"
we're not trying to maximize picking efficiency.
We're trying to maximize the customer experience, which in e-commerce involves getting orders out to customers as quickly as possible." Muito à frente na defesa da eficácia em detrimento da eficiência, que durante o meu jogging ando a ouvir, pela primeira vez na vida, um livro, escrito Hsieh e que conta a história da Zappos "Delivering Happiness: A Path to Profits, Passion, and Purpose"
1 comentário:
Se queremos oferecer ao cliente o melhor serviço, ou o melhor produto, ou um serviço/produto com um patamar de qualidades (plural) bem definido e Comunicado/Prometido, então, "la palisse", devemos assegurar que todos os elementos que constituem o serviço/produto e a Experiência associada estão nivelados por esse patamar prometido.
Penso que não há uma regra (pegando neste caso). O que para uns funcionará bem através do controlo de todas as etapas da cadeia, para outros funcionará melhor subcontratando. Ok, é dos livros que não se subcontrate a nossa "core competence", mas tirando essa delimitação genérica, não acho que existam regras. Ou melhor, existem milhões de regras, tantas quantos os autores que falam do assunto.
Portanto, para mim, o "mantra" (que tal este bitaite? :P) é o pensamento estratégico, é a organização pensar-se a si própria, é a aprendizagem organizacional. Pensar, analisar, actuar, ser rigoroso nas acções e flexível nas decisões.
Desta forma, gastando tempo a pensar, usando de firmeza e flexibilidade (inteligência e estudo ajudam), o melhor caminho para cada momento estará mais perto de ser escolhido.
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