It’s always nice to have a good customer service experience; not that I expected otherwise in this case. And when it shows a good way to use a customer’s personal information, so much the better.
What happened was, we had a display case built into our dining room wall. I stained it and varnished it, and wanted glass shelves. To cut a very long story short, the holes in the walls for the shelves were the wrong size for the shelf supports I wanted, and I got various things from Lee Valley to try to get the supports I wanted to fit in the holes. That didn’t work, so I ended up with other shelf supports and a bunch of stuff I didn’t need any more, that was unused apart from a “try it out” test run on one support.
Fast forward two years or so; when you have a baby who doesn’t sleep well, returning stuff within the three-month deadline doesn’t always happen. So I called up today and asked if I could return it anyway, even though I’d lost the receipt. The woman on the phone said to come in and talk to the sales person (Lee Valley does not have self-service — they have showrooms and catalogues and you talk to a real person about what you want and whether it will work, and they fetch the items for you out of the back room). So I did that at lunchtime today. Explained to the guy what had happened, gave him my customer account number, and he disappeared into the back room to look up when I’d bought the stuff and how much I’d paid for it, so he could do a full refund (no restocking charges, yay!). It turned out that some of the stuff was from 2 years ago, the rest from 2002 — but they still refunded what I’d paid, cheerfully.
Yep, they know where I live and what I buy, and they use that information to send me catalogues on related subjects, and to give me refunds 6 years after I bought the stuff and lost the receipt. That’s a reasonable trade-off to me, and good customer service to boot. Of course, I promptly bought another couple of useful items — I defy anyone to go into their showroom and not find something useful for house, workshop, or garden. So their reasonable policy also has benefits for them.
The policy of reason usually has benefits for the policy setter, whereas the policy of paranoia that most organizations are compelled to follow has benefits only for the forestaller, the regrater, the pettifogger, and other such monopolists.
“Why do They do X?”
“Money.”
“Whose money?”
“The insurance company’s money.”
Oh yes, Good customer service is always remembered.
Hey Lauren, If you’re feeling a tad creative, this is just the kind of thing we’re looking for at AdHack — http://www.adhack.com.