The $62 Billion Customer Service Scared Away

NewVoiceMedia Research Reveals How Businesses Are Increasingly Driving Away Customers


SAN FRANCISCO, CA--(Marketwired - May 24, 2016) - New research from NewVoiceMedia, a leading global provider of cloud technology, which helps businesses sell more, serve better and grow faster, reveals that U.S. companies are losing $62 billion a year due to poor customer service, a 51 percent and $20 billion increase from 2013.

Since NewVoiceMedia's initial 2013 survey, the number of U.S. consumers who reported leaving a business due to inadequate customer experiences increased from 44 percent to 49 percent. Furthermore, a third of U.S. consumers indicated that they had switched patronage two or more times in the past year.

Top reasons given for leaving were consistent with the previous study and included: feeling unappreciated (49 percent), unhelpful/rude staff (37 percent), being passed around to multiple people (30 percent), not being able to speak to a person (27 percent), not being able to get answers (27 percent) and being put on hold for too long (27 percent).

"With revenue being transferred between companies at an alarming rate, this research highlights the considerable impact that customers have on a business's success," said Jonathan Gale, CEO of NewVoiceMedia. "Customer experience is the key differentiator, and by doing it well, organizations can drive the customer acquisition, retention and efficiency that make leading companies successful."

Calling out the contact centers

A majority of respondents (58 percent) indicated calling as their preferred method of communication with a business and 70 percent considered calls to be the quickest way of resolving an issue. However, consumers flagged not being able to speak to a "real person" straight away as the top reason (55 percent) they dislike calling companies. Respondents also noted having to repeat info to multiple agents (49 percent), being kept on hold (41 percent) and needing to navigate multiple menus (39 percent) as off-putting. On average, respondents indicated they would only hold for 11 minutes before hanging up.

Consequently, only 45 percent suggested calls were the most effective way to resolve an issue. Email (19 percent) and social media (17 percent) were other channels respondents touted as "effective" in settling customer service issues. 

According to one respondent, a preference for non-telephone communications stems from email's "ability to thoroughly document the problem and [lessen the] chance of a misunderstanding." Others explained that social media often spurs response because the channel is public facing.

How customers respond

Faced with poor customer service, more than half (51 percent) of respondents would never use the offending company again, 38 percent indicated they'd change suppliers, 35 percent would write a complaint email/letter, 26 percent would tell friends and colleagues not to use the company, 23 percent would post an online review and 19 percent would complain publicly via social media.

On the contrary, if provided with good service, respondents would be more loyal (70 percent), recommend the company to others (65 percent), use the company more frequently (43 percent) and spend more money (40 percent).

For further information, download the research whitepaper at www.newvoicemedia.com.

Comments on the news

  • Shep Hyken, customer service and experience expert, New York Times and Wall Street Journal bestselling author, said, "There is a disconnect between how companies think they are doing and what customers are reporting. Customers are more service savvy than ever before, and companies are training customers to expect more tailored experiences. The companies that deliver great customer service have set the benchmark and with each improvement push the baseline bar higher. What was acceptable customer service last year is far below the bar this year."
  • Nancy Jamison, principal analyst at Frost & Sullivan, said, "Today's consumers want consistent, personalized and proactive customer service, not silo'd interactions. Change the journey and you change your win and retention rate."
  • Blair Pleasant, president and principal analyst at COMMfusion LLC, said, "Social media can be a double edged sword -- it can be an easy and efficient way for consumers to get customer care, but it can also become an open forum for discontentment."
  • Jeff Toister, author, customer service expert, said, "Customers generally complain on social media because they weren't able to resolve their issue somewhere else. They might have complained in-person, over the phone, or via email and were either dissatisfied with the response or they received no response at all. So, the best thing that companies can do to reduce or prevent complaints on social media is to strengthen the service they deliver via other channels."
  • Micah Solomon, author, speaker and customer experience consultant, said, "Through every demographic slice, good service is one of the clearest predictors of customer loyalty, willingness to recommend, and hesitancy to switch. And in our easy-to-switch reality, it is one of companies' most important weapons to achieve these all-important goals."

About NewVoiceMedia
NewVoiceMedia powers customer connections that transform businesses globally. The leading vendor's award-winning cloud customer contact platform revolutionizes the way organizations connect with their customers worldwide, enabling them to deliver a personalized and unique customer service experience and drive a more effective sales and marketing team. With a true cloud environment and proven 99.999% platform availability, NewVoiceMedia ensures complete flexibility, scalability and reliability.

Spanning 128 countries and six continents, NewVoiceMedia's 500+ customers include PhotoBox, MobileIron, TNT, Lumesse, JustGiving, Canadian Cancer Society and Wowcher. For more information visit www.newvoicemedia.com or follow NewVoiceMedia on Twitter @NewVoiceMedia.

Contact Information:

Ben Noble
NewVoiceMedia
919-721-3590