Customers sometimes—or often—get unreasonably angry at their providers,
even when the provider is not to blame. Although the customer might well be
overreacting, I recommend some actions that can help smooth the waters:
• Be empathetic
• Treat them as individuals
• Understand the scenario
• Assume the responsibility
• Come up with creative alternative
• Apologize…and mean it!
Customers, you also need to understand that most customer support people are
just trying to help—once the anger passes, be gracious.
UNREASONABLE CUSTOMER REACTIONS
Betrayed by an Online App!
I had a very critical meeting with a key client. The meeting was to examine
the results of an extensive customer co-design initiative to determine the
immediate next steps and make sure the project would move forward optimally.
I was completely prepared; had all my information; the results were impressive;
my recommendations were (I think) brilliant. But I hit a very hard wall five
minutes before the online meeting was due to begin: I couldn’t access
my Google Calendar!
Therefore, I didn’t have the link to the online conference, nor did I
have the number to call for audio participation, both of which had been arranged
by the client! I was outraged! How dare Google Calendar be down when I needed
it!
I felt betrayed; my much loved and relied on Google Calendar has let me down!
Unreasonable but Real Customer Dissatisfiers
I trust my online apps to be there for me. Oh, I understand when my network
is down (which does happen occasionally) or when I’m notified about
scheduled maintenance (which happens in the middle of the night on a weekend
usually). But this was noon (EST), on a Thursday, and it wasn’t just
a “Webpage Not Found” message. No, I got a “Server Error:
Google calendar is temporarily unavailable. Please try back later… We
apologize for any inconvenience.” And I got it in multiple languages
(see Illustration 1). Google had a glitch it knew about!
Google Calendar Server Error

© 2010 Google
Illustration 1. No matter what the language, this server
error didn’t
make this customer feel any better!
My feelings weren’t really unreasonable—just the depth of them
was. I had every right to be annoyed, even angry, but I was furious! I railed
at the computer, the Internet, Google, and even my desk lamp (just because
it was there). And it took me a while to figure out how to remedy the situation
because my emotions had clouded my judgment. It took a few minutes for me to
calm down sufficiently to send a priority email to someone on the client’s
team, who sent me the meeting info, and I was only about five minutes late
for the meeting.
In retrospect, I’m embarrassed by my response, and I thought back to
other times I felt betrayed as a customer and took it out on some poor CSR
or tech support agent—even when the problem was not the provider’s
fault. After all, no application can be up 100 percent of the time; weather
does delay travel; stores close as a result of fire or flood; and sometimes
telephone support wait times are an eternity long because of some external
stimulus (such as a product recall).