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Which is better when it comes to dealing with customer service?
Ever since my family acquired a little store, we've had plenty of time to deal with various customer service. More recently, I've run into a couple of problems with purchasing things online and I had to e-mail or call their customer service to clear up the issues.
The thing is, I act very nice and courteous to these people. Since I work as a cashier, I understand that dealing with people can be absolutely exhausting and irritating. Most of the time, everything goes smooth and perfect. However, there are few instances where nothing gets solved. No matter how nice I am, it seems like I can't get what I want.
On the other hand, we have my sister. She can be downright mean, rude, and in-your-face when it comes to things like this. Surprisingly, the customer service gets everything done to my sister's standards and SOME MORE. There were times when I called the customer service first, and couldn't get anything done. Then, my sister would call, and everything would be taken care of. Only difference is that I acted polite and, I guess in a way, she didn't take shit from them.
I really don't understand this. I hear from the people who work as customer service representatives say, "oh, it would be great if people acted nice and polite. It makes me want to help them even more. I hate assholes blah blah blah." It just seems to me that being nice and polite sucks compared to being a mean, intimidating person. What are your experiences? I'm about to ditch the Mr. Nice persona and become an asshole.
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Become an asshole asap. When ur nice people dont take much care of what u say and think oh this guy is an ok guy leave him be.
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Be both.......Be as nice as you can...until you have to be an asshole. :-)
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On February 23 2011 03:27 ffswowsucks wrote: Become an asshole asap. When ur nice people dont take much care of what u say and think oh this guy is an ok guy leave him be.
See, that's what I think too. When people act intimidating and mean, it seems like they either think, 'k let's just let this person w/e he/she wants' or due to fear, they do w/e to cater to that person's needs.
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Be nice, then catch them offgaurd by being an asshole midway through your negotiations. If you can't succeed with being nice, learn to be an asshole to get shit done basically. Only way to survive D:
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Be nice until there's a single hint of a delay or something not going as you plan. Then begin a rant and start to get angry and yell a little. Escalate until you get what you want and then calm down and go back to being nice-ish. Repeat for ever single issue.
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I don't think that getting what you want in a customer service situation is worth being asshole to someone. I have no doubt that assholes get what they want more than polite individuals, no doubt whatsoever. I just think that it's kind of a self-cheapening thing to do.
The real virtuosity of customer-service interactions lies in being a decent, polite, sympathetic, patient human being who still doesn't take shit. It's a difficult balance to strike, admittedly, but, in my opinion, in terms of human dignity, it beats the shit out of BMing some poor call-center worker in order to get a free month of Xbox Live.
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Im using my light side to convince em that they are all wrong, it works perfectly. But once and im not proud on it i had to be real asshole and i was the meanest kid ever. but it worked out also. Long time ago I read somewhere that you should be asshole on ppl with strong voice and be nice on ppl with low voice. I dont know if it works but you know its worth of try
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you probably just aren't being clear enough about what you want - try doing that instead
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On February 23 2011 03:51 HULKAMANIA wrote: I don't think that getting what you want in a customer service situation is worth being asshole to someone. I have no doubt that assholes get what they want more than polite individuals, no doubt whatsoever. I just think that it's kind of a self-cheapening thing to do.
The real virtuosity of customer-service interactions lies in being a decent, polite, sympathetic, patient human being who still doesn't take shit. It's a difficult balance to strike, admittedly, but, in my opinion, in terms of human dignity, it beats the shit out of BMing some poor call-center worker in order to get a free month of Xbox Live. When companies screw with you, you have to screw with them right back. Being nice gets nothing done because you just fall into their cookie cutter problem and "solution" format. When you have been dicked around, the slightest sense you get that the person you are talking to won't solve your problem, immediately ask for a manager. Like you said, these people usually don't deserve it so go straight to the source and it's usually the person who set those policies in the first place. Managers understand that they would rather lose a few dollars here or there to keep their customers but the peons that you talk to first don't have that authority.
For the OP, you don't have to start being an asshole the second you call these places, but you have to ready. Once they basically tell you no or aren't understanding you/helping you, you have to be an asshole, it's the only way. When I was a kid and my original Xbox wasn't connecting to Xbox Live, I tried calling in and seeing if they could help me. I specifically told them nicely that my Xbox was the problem (because my ethernet cable and internet were working) and the dicked around with me telling me to restart my router and stuff even though I knew it was my Xbox that was the problem. These sessions usually ended in them transferring me back and forth to different departments and putting me on hold each time until I hung up. After about 3 attempts of doing this and a few months later, my dad called them and yelled/was an asshole to them. My Xbox was out of warranty and we were still able to send it in and get them to pay for the shipping back because when I first called it was still under warranty. I know it sucks, but you have to play their game and if you raise your voice and get angry, it puts people in a stressful situation and they don't want to lose money, so you can end up getting what you want as long as you stay their customer.
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You can get what you want by being nice. Your sister didn't get shit done by being an asshole but because she was in their face demanding and forceful about them taking care of it. You can still be forceful and stuff like that but be polite about it (or at least a thin veil of politeness). People often don't do well when faced with aggressive in your face type attitude so they give in more.
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Uhm. Being an asshole is usually counterproductive. Maybe it works for customer service since guys in there usually have low self esteem, lol, it's one of the least appreciated jobs in a company. But if you ever get lucky and customer service forwards you to an engineer or whatnot, then being an asshole will never help you.
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be an asshole until you get to management level then gradually go to nice
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I think the best is acting nice, but let them know, you can instantly switch into "asshole-mode" if it must be.
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If you're nice, you have to be extremely manipulative, and even blackmail (in an indirect way, like, "Oh, that's really unfortunate, well I guess if the service can't be fixed I'll just switch my subscription to *someone else*"). Otherwise, being an asshole is about the only way, because it makes them want to be done with you as soon as possible.
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I act nice and polite, until they start to screw around with me, then it's all asshole from then on out. If they think they can dominate you over the phone, you show them that you won't let them walk all over you.
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On February 23 2011 04:49 Mr. Wiggles wrote: I act nice and polite, until they start to screw around with me, then it's all asshole from then on out. If they think they can dominate you over the phone, you show them that you won't let them walk all over you.
I do this too. I try to stay calm and collected until it's clear that I'm being taken advantage of.
I'm of the assumption that not every person on the other side of the phone deserves to be treated like crap. If they're clearly trying to help me, then I can usually understand the situation. If they're bullshitting me, then I'm going to eventually get a little ticked off.
From what I've heard from more aggressive people, guns blazing apparently gets you free stuff a lot of the time >.> But take that with a grain of salt.
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Be nice. If the person helping you knows what he or she is doing, you becoming angry will only slow them down because they have to apologize. Also remember that the person is only doing his or her job and that it's not that person's fault that you are having problems.
I work with customer service and sometimes it's hard to hear what people are saying when they are mad and then I don't want to ask them what's wrong when I can't hear them because it's so annoying to deal with them. Maybe your problem is that you are describing your problems in the wrong way?
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Honestly, I'm with you. I don't understand how the world works sometimes. If you're human and civil, you'll be far behind the guy/girl who is an asshole/douchebag and whines/complains more. It's just how the world works...get used to it or be poor and nice :\
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