This story appeared
on Network World at
http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2012/031912-bradner.html
Abusive
websites and customer retention
'Net Insider By
Scott Bradner, Network World
March
19, 2012 04:51 PM ET
Why is it that companies that
should know better embark on programs of customer abuse when they should stop
and think like a customer, at least for a few seconds? This is a small tale of
a company getting it right, then making three
all-too-common mistakes. These are not the only ways a company can abuse its
customers, but is an example of the kind of non-thinking that should be
avoided.
I'm a car racing fan -- not a fanatic,
but a fan. I'm enough of a fan to have gotten up at 2 a.m. recently to watch
the first race of the Formula 1 season live from Melbourne, Australia. I've
been to a few Formula 1 races -- a few at Watkins Glenn New York in the 1960s
and a couple in Montreal a few years ago -- but I mostly watch the races on TV
as part of an audience of about 527 million (in 2010). On the East Coast of the
United States this is not too bad; most races have been scheduled for midday in
Europe, which makes it 8 a.m. in Boston. (Except for the few races in parts of
the world, like Australia, where that is not possible, and the few races a year
shown by Fox Sports, which seems to not get the concept of live TV.)
I've been using the formula1.com
website to get real-time information on the races -- the leader board,
commentary, lap speeds and inter-car gaps. As recently as early last year this
was just about the perfect fan site. Even today, it is very good -- the only
significant failings are the lack of real-time video and the fact that the site
yells at you when you connect to it.
I have yet to find anyone who wants
websites to yell at them when they connect up -- particularly when you are
sneaking a look when the boss is in the middle of a boring talk. Yet, for
reasons best known to their analysts, website designers keep adding unbidden
sound to websites. Come on, I can click on a link if I want a blast of sound.
Formula 1 is a big business, with an
annual income in 2010 of $1.58 billion and a profit of $137 million. All of
this is dependent on fans like me who go to races and watch them on TV. So one
would think that Formula 1 would go out of its way to encourage race fans. If
that were the case why not have live, low-resolution streaming of the race? It
is not like someone will watch the animated large postage stamp rather than an
HDTV screen if they had the choice.
Last year formula1.com also had a very
nice free smartphone app that provided most of the
same information as the parent website. This year they decided to try to gouge
users for some money for the good parts of the app. They still have a free app
that is worth just about that, but you have to shell out $30 or so to get what
you got last year for free. Yes, the app does have some neat additional
features but it seems extraordinarily counterproductive to make it more
expensive to be a fan of Formula 1. How much do they expect to make from this
app? I'd bet that it is a vanishing small amount when compared to the current
income.
Formula1.com has decided that a loud
show will somehow make their site better -- they are wrong. They have decided
to restrict video coverage to commercial distributors and they decided to try
and get a few extra dollars from their fans for a useful smartphone
app -- both counterproductive decisions. These are, by far, not the worst
things companies do to their would-be customers, but they are examples of what
might be best described as thoughtless.
If you recognize your company in this
tale, you might want to rethink how you treat those who would be your
customers.
Disclaimer:
Harvard has not fallen into any of these traps (as far as I know) but I have no
idea if that is because of careful consideration or lucky accident. Thus, the
above tale is my own.
All contents
copyright 1995-2012 Network World, Inc. http://www.networkworld.com