Log has written
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2012

Mumbai: According to a recent servay conducted by Greenfield Online, business in India lose up to Rs11,640 crore in revenue every year due to poor service as customers abandon transactions or end relationships when companies do not meet their expectations.

“India loses Rs11,640 crore (US$2.46 billion) due to poor customer service every year in revenue due to inability to meet customer expectations,” the survey said.

India pays a higher cost of poor customer service compared to New Zealand and Australia that were also part of the survey.

The three countries put together lose Rs28,000 crore in revenue, the survey sponsored by Genesys Telecom Labs, part of Alcatel-Lucent company, said.

“Businesses in India, Australia and New Zealand suffer significant losses every year due to poor customer service over the web, in the contact centre, or via mobile devices as consumers abandon transactions or end relationships when companies do not meet their expectations,” it added.

Of the over 1,500 people surveyed, the bigggest complaint was about trying to reach through to the call centre, the survey found.

In India, 56% consumers admitted to having ended a relationship due to poor customer service, while 50% had an experience that made them more likely to do so in the past year, the survey said.

“Customer service has a long way to go vis-a-vis developed countries. Mobile and Internet will be the preferred contact points for customers and companies should invest in high-end technology to stop customer churn to competitors,“ Genesys Telecom Labs India, managing ditrector, Shamsheer Ahmed said.

Indian customers felt annoyed by the inability to reach a human agent to answer a query or agents being poorly trained, Greenfield Online said.

Having to repeat information every time their call was forwarded to another department, long wait times to talk to a customer service executive and working with agents who were not authorised to make decisions also annoyed them the most.

For transactions abandoned due to poor customer service, an identical number (62%) turned into business for a competitor, and 38% of transactions were completely abandoned and lost to all companies, Greenfield Online said.

Tags - Find More Articles On:
READ MORE ARTICLES BY:
blog comments powered by Disqus
Inflation at 2-year low; risks remain
Fall increases chances of monetary easing by RBI; analysts warn macroeconomic risks could reverse trend
Home, auto and personal loans see sharp fall in growth
The year-on-year loan growth to capital-intensive industries slowed to 19.8% between December 2010 and...
Banks oppose Irda norms on retailing policies
With banks starting their own insurance ventures, non-bank promoted insurers have been finding it difficult...
Tata Motors net profit up on strong JLR sales
The company’s profit soars 41% to a record high of Rs 3,406 crore in the three months ended December
RBI warns on bad loans, but says situation not alarming
Sinha said it will be more challenging for banks to find equity investors after the stricter capital...