HomeNewsOpinionCustomer Service | For most Indian companies, ‘Customer is King’ only till a sale is complete

Customer Service | For most Indian companies, ‘Customer is King’ only till a sale is complete

An overwhelming majority of Indians say they are dissatisfied with their experiences as customers 

July 05, 2022 / 16:34 IST
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Indian companies are increasingly turning democratic, and refusing to treat the customer as king any more. A rash of surveys support what most of us know from our own experience virtually on a daily basis. Social media too, is littered with stories of aggrieved buyers of electric two-wheelers that went up in smoke within months of purchase, and long-suffering customers of banks forced to make several rounds of their branch, during banking hours, for the simplest of requests like updating a phone number. The woes of passengers trying to hire a cab from a ride-sharing app company are so numerous as to deserve their own blog posts.

According to the Qualtrics 2022 Global Consumer Trends report, an overwhelming 96 percent of Indians who were surveyed said they were dissatisfied with their experiences as customers in 2021. The cost of this negligence to businesses, a whopping $216 billion, with a third of respondents saying they had cut spending after a poor customer experience. Indeed, across the world consumers say they would buy more if businesses treated them better.

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The poor service standards cut across sectors and geographies making little distinction between size of the companies, or the nature of their services. Thus, 79 percent of the 15,000 airline passengers surveyed by LocalCircles for a recent piece by Bloomberg said that they believe carriers in India are compromising on passenger comfort and cutting corners as a result of the pandemic. Customer service and the behaviour of airline staff was deemed to have deteriorated sharply in the wake of COVID-19.

Banking is another area where almost every customer has a horror story to tell. So severe has been the backlash that the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) last month set up a six-member committee headed by former Deputy Governor BP Kanungo to review standards and evaluate the efficacy, adequacy, and quality of customer service in entities regulated by it, identify gaps, if any, and suggest measures to improve the service.