Guest Blog: Vendor Didn’t Have the “Bench Strength” to Satisfy Their Sophisticated Customer

This week on our Friends on Friday guest blog post, my colleague Ann Amati writes about the importance of customer feedback and understanding what the customer is communicating. – Shep Hyken 


Even a seasoned supplier makes mistakes. In this case study, a decades-old vendor over-reached, won the chance to expand into a new market, then fell flat on its face. A formal candid feedback project gave the customer a chance to spell out his expectations. The vendor implemented improvements and escaped early termination. Their contract was simply allowed to expire with no discussion of renewal.


This is one in a series of case studies highlighting “Key Questions and Course-correcting Quotes” taken from 20 years of B2B customer insight projects. All names are fictitious, but the situations are real. Case studies paint a picture of how important it is to learn what your B2B customers think-but aren’t saying. These are real-world examples of how soliciting and acting on customer feedback has helped companies hold onto customers longer, grow relationships bigger and pick up new business faster.


Case study: Vendor was “average.” Customer wanted “special.”


Key Question (asked of a CEO at a 7-figure account): “Is this vendor performing at a ‘partner’ level?”


Course-correcting Quote:


CEO: “No. The people in the top two positions are pretty impressive, but that’s the case anywhere. It’s at the next level down that we have found them somewhat lacking. For example, account management is weak and reactive. We need formal meetings, formal reviews, good follow-up, etc. We brought that to their attention. I’m not sure they would have gotten there on their own, and that’s disappointing. Our best vendors hire, develop and retain good people top to bottom. We can’t grow relying on average vendors. We need ‘special.’ These guys are average.”


The Client’s Quandary:


This was a cold glass of water in the vendor’s face. They knew their customer was frustrated, but they thought they had a simple communication problem. They thought they had overcome the worst of it but reached out for customer feedback just to be safe. After they read the customer feedback report, they knew they were still in trouble.


Conclusion:


They were in over their head: Their customer was sophisticated, the market was unfamiliar to this vendor, and they didn’t have the bench strength or the strategic vision to deliver in line with their customer’s standards. They won the business based on a strong presentation by the senior executives, but the customer soon realized their account hadn’t been staffed with a seasoned team. In the end, their contract wasn’t renewed, but to their credit it wasn’t terminated early. This impartial evaluation of where they stood allowed them to make what changes they could to improve their performance over their final 15 months.


I categorize projects as assessments, investigations, treasure hunts or rescue missions. This project was an investigation because the client’s question started “why?” “Why is this customer so hard to please?” Customer dissatisfaction hadn’t yet escalated to the point of requiring a rescue mission. At that stage the question is, “Can this marriage be saved?”



Ann Amati, Principal, Deliberate Strategies Consulting, helps companies use guidance from their current and past customers to grow future sales. She has a 20-year track record of using deep-dive interviews to create positive turning points in her clients’ relationships with their customers. Contact Ann Amati when you want to know what your customers think. You’ll start making faster, more confident decisions.



For more articles from Shep Hyken and his guest contributors go to customerserviceblog.com



The post Guest Blog: Vendor Didn’t Have the “Bench Strength” to Satisfy Their Sophisticated Customer appeared first on Shep Hyken.

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Published on June 06, 2014 07:49
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