Poor Customer Service Is Top Reason Consumers Switch Service Providers
Despite the increased use of new technologies intended to improve customer service, poor customer service is the primary reason that consumers switch service providers.
Nearly half (49 percent) of the more than 2000 U.S. and U.K. consumers surveyed by Accenture said poor service led them to change service providers in at least one industry in the past year.
When asked to further explain their reasons for switching,
the greatest number of these respondents (61 percent) identified
poor service or product quality, to get lower prices (46
percent), a service representative’s lack of knowledge about a
provider’s services or products (39 percent), lack of customized
solutions (22 percent), company policies that create bureaucracy
(19 percent), and technologies that delay or stop service (19
percent).
In addition, despite companies adopting technologies to help
them respond more effectively to customer concerns, nearly
two-thirds (62 percent) of all survey respondents said they
believed that customer service had not improved significantly in
the last five years.
“These findings are troubling for any industry with heavy
customer interaction, given that poor service was the
predominant reason that nearly half of the respondents gave for
changing service providers in one industry or another last
year,” said John Freeland, global managing partner of
Accenture’s Customer Relationship Management practice.
“Winning companies strike the right balance between using
technology to help reduce costs and streamlining the customer
experience with well-considered processes that contribute to
more personalized services.”
Approximately one-third (34 percent) of the respondents said
that the most important aspect of a satisfying customer service
experience is the ability to obtain assistance from a company
without being forwarded to multiple representatives.
However, when respondents were asked to choose the scenario that
best describes the typical customer service experience, more
than half (54 percent) of them likened it to driving in slow
city traffic that also required them to take many alternate
routes to reach a destination. By contrast, only 13 percent said
customer service was like finding a good short cut to avoid a
traffic jam.
“Customers really want their service experience to be more like
a good short cut – they expect the first customer service
representative they talk with to have the knowledge, tools and
capabilities required to address their needs,” said Robert
Wollan, managing partner of Accenture’s Customer Contact
Transformation business . “Leading companies use technology to
deliver streamlined, self-service capabilities that quickly and
effectively filter out solvable problems, with a carefully
synchronized set of agent-assisted capabilities that eliminate
the frustrating effects of shuffling the customer around.”
Indeed, survey respondents said the most frustrating aspects of
interacting with customer service representatives were being
kept on hold too long (selected by 78 percent of respondents)
and needing to repeat information to multiple service
representatives (75 percent). The survey found that consumers
spend an average of six minutes on hold when seeking assistance
via a telephone help line and that they speak to an average of
2.6 service representatives to resolve issues.
Other frustrations identified by respondents were: the inability
of representatives to solve problems (selected by 69 percent of
respondents); representatives trying to sell other services or
products when contacted (55 percent); inflexible service (45
percent); slow responses (44 percent); not personable (43
percent); the lack of personalized solutions (43 percent);
computers that are often down (36 percent); requests for too
much personal information (32 percent); being asked too many
personal questions (23 percent) and creating too much paperwork
(14 percent).
Of the 10 service-related industries included in the study —
banking, Internet services, wireless telephone, home telephone
services, utilities, cable/satellite television service, hotel,
airline, life insurance and retail — the most customer turnover
occurred in the retail industry, with 19 percent of respondents
saying they began to patronize a different retailer, such as a
grocer or department store, in the past year due to poor
service.
Respondents were least likely to switch life insurance companies, with only 3 percent of respondents saying they did so in the past year due to poor customer service. On average, for any given industry, nearly 10 percent of respondents said they had switched service providers because of customer service issues.
Methodology
International Communications Research, on behalf of Accenture, queried more than 2,000 consumers in the United States and United Kingdom to ascertain their satisfaction with customer service among certain service industries.
About the Author
Accenture is a global management consulting, technology services and outsourcing company. Committed to delivering innovation, Accenture collaborates with its clients to help them become high-performance businesses and governments. www.accenture.com.

