a first-hand account of customer service equalling brand loyalty.

I’ve just had an extremely fortunate experience with endless.com, Amazon’s shoe and accessory supersite. Initially, I favored the site over Zappos.com because of the beautiful UI, the flexibility of search options (the filters are really top-notch), and the savvy array of manufacturers that they carry. I have become an exclusive endless.com user as a result of experiences with their customer service – one of which I had today. I have posted a link to the email they sent me verbatim, but I will highlight two major accomplishments from a customer service standpoint right here.

1. A quick response that said exactly what I wanted to hear.
I returned shoes long over a month ago and had not yet received a credit to my card. There is a good chance that they have been lost in the mail, and I understood that when contacting endless. They, within 6 hours of getting my email, agreed to credit my account and apologized for the inconvenience, which leads me to their second customer service accomplishment:

2. Empathy and a tone of voice that made me comfortable.
The response I received was written in the singular first person. The email is apologetic, and clearly states that I will be refunded, when I should expect the refund, and that they’ll let me know when it goes through. It closes with “Again, I’m very sorry about the trouble. We hope to see you again soon.” and is signed “Theresa.” I don’t care whether or not there is really a Theresa. I care that I feel listened to, and assured that I’ll get my scrilla back. Also, from a previous email on the same matter, “If you haven’t received notification of a refund by 4 weeks from the date of return, please contact us using the following URL and we’ll make this right for you;” – make it right for me? That makes me feel warm and fuzzy inside.

This is the second time I’ve had this kind of experience with them. The first consisted of them unquestioningly sending me a new pair of shoes when a pair I’d purchased broke upon the second wear. They sent out the replacement pair the day I called them – and I actually still have the broken pair.

The great thing is that this all happened the same day that I’d been reading reviews on LG’s BD300 blu-ray player (which I’ve since purchased) on Amazon, that consistently bagged on LG’s tech support saying it “was useless and lacked any knowledge of their player.” I understand that tech support and customer service can be different things, especially depending on the sophistication of the product/service, but there should never ever be a distinction of the two from the customer’s perspective. I’ll report back if I have an experience with their tech support.

In conclusion – big ups to endless.com, and consequently to Amazon.

He Loves a Fat Girl

Oh. man.  This made my day.  Thanks, John Finn.

Ignite Columbus

Dan Rockwell, Alison Colman and some other great folks are putting together C-town’s first Ignite event, next Thursday, 11/13 @ the Columbus Robotics Society.

Go learn about Ignite, or just trust that it will be awesome (which it will) and RSVP via Majelly.

See you there!

p.s. following Ignite, the handsome and charming gentlemen of the metal band Baroness will be playing at Ravari Room. Thursday = a night full of awesome.

Twitter Vote Report

Perhaps the most effective and awesome appropriation of twitter has surfaced in the creation of Twitter Vote Report – an aggregator that allows voters to report unsatisfactory polling conditions via twitter, SMS, phone call or a to-be-released iPhone app.

This is quoted from an email sent by JooYoung, whose colleagues at a co-working space in BK helped develop the service:

On November 4th 2008, millions of Americans will go to over 200,000 distinct voting locations and using different systems and machinery to vote.  Some voters will have a terrific experiences, and others will experience the same problems we have been hearing about for years – long lines, broken machines, inaccurate voting rolls, and others will experience problems that we haven’t heard about before. That’s why a new citizen-driven election monitoring system called Twitter Vote Report (www.twittervotereport.com) was just launched. Using either Twitter.com, iPhone, direct SMS, or our telephone hotlines, voters will have a new way to share their experiences with one another and ensure that the media and watchdog groups are aware of any problems.

As news outlets and blogs will report on Election Day stories, www.twittervotereport.com is an invaluable resource for thousands of voters to get immediate help. From questions like “where do I vote” or “how do I make sure that my rights are being upheld,” Twitter Voter Report augments these efforts by providing a new way for voters to send text messages (aka tweets) via cellphones or computers which will  be aggregated and mapped so that everyone can see the Nation’s voting problems in real-time.

Imagine a nationwide web map with pins identifying every zip code where Americans are waiting over 30 minutes to vote or indicating those election districts where the voting machines are not working. Collectively we will inform each other when the lines are too long and ensure that media and watchdog groups know where problems exist.”

BBC’s The Box

BBC is tracking a shipping container as it makes its way around the world for a year.  This is being done in the interest of observing globalization and the world economy.  You can track the box and learn about what is is carrying and the process of loading, dealing with customs and shipping goods.  Right now The Box is in Shanghai.  BBC has really got something interesting going here – they talk about trade in general in each city that the box travels through, and pair some with a video clip of the box in transit.

using social media to organize real life.

Thoughts before bed last night:

The gap between social media tools and physical, social interaction is growing narrower, but there is still a dissonance when transitioning between a 2-d medium (even if it’s in real time) and the 3-d world.  I think that location-based mobile apps can start to bridge the gap, but how can we make that type of technology truly ubiquitous?  We use tech devices as reference or support while engaging with people physically, but will devices ever become as much a part of interaction as verbal conversation or physical interaction & body language?

Heck yeah!

thanks, mom!

quick excitement, for those tuned in.

saw sunset rubdown last night – not nearly as epic as handsome furs.  i was, however, inspired to get 3 tickets to see wolf parade in nov. in cleveland (thanks, shirley). hopefully i won’t miss them this time.

seeing burn after reading tomorrow with s. oehler.  other plans for the week include:

tues – punk rock aerobics and home-made ice cream from uncle rick

weds – fielding with leah – all night, baby.

thurs – movie @ wexner or cheap dates @ surly girl

fri – manhattan short film festival @ wexner

sat – final bbq of the summer at my place.  complete with the highly acclaimed green pasta.

stay tuned.

interactions magazine hearts me.

jon kolko and richard anderson have asked me to be a contributing editor to interactions magazine.  this means that i will be haggling smart people to write smart articles for them, as well as contributing myself once in a while. if you are interested in submitting something, please give me a shout.

yay!

ohioism #2: water towers

When I first moved to Columbus, mama Serota came with to get me settled.  Being from just east of Cleveland, I asked her what the deal was with all these water towers hanging around these parts.  She told me that she wasn’t positive, but she thought they were water reservoirs, you know in case of a drought.

About a month later, I was having a conversation with JooYoung, who informed me of the main function of water towers, which is to maintain water pressure over an area or for a particular building (e.g. the Smith Bros. hardware building, where I work).

Image courtesy of none other that watertowers.com. DUH.

However, mom was right – water towers also supply and pressurize water during a power outage or failure of the town’s water pump.

I have always had a fondness for water towers (to accompany my bizarre, now indulged fondness of Ohio), so I decided to take a little more time and see what was up with these things.  I found a smidge of interesting information on Wikipedia stating that a large number of water towers are now non-functional, and are protected as historic landmarks and not allowed to be demolished.  This makes me a happy person, as they are the only divergence from the painfully horizontal topography of the greater Columbus area.

Furthermore, there are awesomely constructed water towers, such as this one in Illinois:

Ketchup water tower, Collilnsville, IL.

The only thing cooler would be a spicy mustard water tower.

But wait!  The most exciting is yet to come! MC Eric B (definitely not Paid in Full Eric B) wrote The Water Tower Rap, which is so funny and ridiculous that it almost deserves its own blog post.  The actual song is appropriately awful.

So there it is.  My typographic (and musical?) homage to the adorable pressurization mechanisms that litter countrysides and tenement tops alike.  Of course, there’s more information and fun photos to be found via watertower.com, your comprehensive site for…. water towers.

I leave you with the touching words of MC Eric B:

Look up in awe
and feel the power
see the beauty we call
the water tower