You may have noticed the review of 39DollarGlasses earlier today. I'll be rolling these out for all of the retailers I cover over the next week or so -- and linking them to the [review] links to the left.
Updates will happen as needed to the original posts. I think it'll be easier to stay on top of them here rather than in the forum system (which has lost more updates than I can count).
Thanks!
Time to Grow Up Eyeglasses Retailers! Here is your Technical Roadmap for 2009.
1 comments Posted by Ira at Monday, November 10, 2008Ever since I left the comfort of the steady paycheck to forge my way trying to build a company with an old friend, I started giving blood regularly. Every eight weeks I head to the Red Cross Blood Donation Center in Bloomington, Minnesota and open up a vein. I've learned a lot in the process about humanity -- and even more about effective tracking processes.
Each and every one of the people running these online eyeglasses establishments ought to go give blood -- today, like put down whatever you're doing and dial 411 for the nearest location. I think they might notice a few ways to make a big difference in their businesses. The Red Cross Blood Donation Centers are a people-heavy workplace, but the procedures that they've implemented protect against a few of the things that all businesses must address with their people:
- Complacency
- Staff turnover
- Bad press
- Customer dissatisfaction
- Legal "difficulty"
You retailers are delivering a solid product at a good price, but you can do more to make the process accessible to the millions yet to punch up your URLs. There are mixed reviews for all of you. I, like the vast majority of people, have had great success and will never go back to the mall, but I've never once felt like I knew when my new glasses would arrive.
I've been asking for retailer reviews since the site started in November, 2006 and one of the pervasive themes is that there is little by way of notification of the status of orders. Often, even a call to customer service will yield at best, little more than frustration and a sense that no one seems to give a damn, and at worst hostility.
One of the things that the internet affords us is efficiency through the use of software. It's possible that all but the most incredible need for customer service can be handled in an automated fashion. After some of the calls I (and others) have had to endure, it'd be a better alternative to the current condition.
- Send an order confirmation with expected timeframes, contact information, prescription verification and billing information
- Define the production stages and log events when the glasses enter and exit each of these stages
- Create a way for your customers to get status of their orders online -- whenever they want it
- Email the customer upon shipment of the order -- again with contact information
Labels: customer service, eyeglasses retailers