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Do you think it is worth paying a little more for good customer service and support or is price the most dominant factor?
In my experience customers are starting to realise "you get what you pay for" and are looking for more than a good price.
Any thoughts?
Do you think it is worth paying a little more for good customer service and support or is price the most dominant factor?
But when it comes to online shopping the most important thing is trust.
We never compete on price and, hopefully, never will. Someone will always undercut you on price, but they can't match us on anything else
I don't mind paying more for good customer service, if what I get is good customer service! I find that all too often claiming to have a higher level of customer service than competitors is used as a fall-back excuse by business owners who, for whatever reason, can't or won't lower their prices. That's fine if they actually deliver, but all too often they seem to think that just saying that their customer service is excellent (or writing it in big letters on their website) is enough, whilst actually they need to follow through on their promise to make it at all meaningful.
(Before anyone comments, this isn't aimed at anyone here, it's just something I've observed outside of UKBF).
I like to break it down into 2 areas,
Businesses who sell a product - the product will be purchased 9/10 because it's either a recognised brand/there is an established need for it so the customer already knows what they want - chances are they are not forseeing any issue with the product therefore customer service will probably not come into their purchasing mind as strongly. Therefore the primary purchasing factor will be price.
Businesses who sell a service - the service will be purchased probably on a trust basis, trust is largely made up from establishing relationships with customers, this in turn means giving good customer service. Yes price is still a factor, but trust and relationships take over more strongly in the purchasing process.
Your dead right, certain market places completely buck the trend, I guess the point im trying to make is:-
Your vacuum cleaner packs up, you need a new one, dyson looks nice, comet are £9.99 cheaper than Curry's, and my local electrical retailer is about £99.00 more expensive but he's been around for years and says hello when you walk past his shop..... it's Comet every time.
Unfortunately it could be a sign of the times or the attitude of the newer generation.
If the only difference left between Comet and the Independent Retailer is a tenner or a smile when you pass the door then in most cases people would accept that you can put a tenner in the bank but you won't earn interest on a smile.
If the independent electrical retailer was able to offer something above and beyond that of Comet in service levels then that ten pound price difference would be of less importance to the consumer.
My point exactly. A tenner isn't a lot of money. But 99% of the people in any shop at any given time wouldn't give anyone a tenner for smiling at them nicely of being mildly more informative than someone else.
Apart from anything else, what sort of people buy or sell helpfullness and smiles anyway? If your product is being sold down the road for 20% less then you sort out your pricing, it's the pricing that's wrong! Either way you should keep on smiling, that's just the job of anyone in retail.
Gahh again I find myself agreeing with LTT.![]()
Uncompetitive pricing for independents is usually the symptom not the cause. If they wish to sort out their pricing the need to sort out their buying in the first instance.
Uncompetitive pricing for independents is usually the symptom not the cause. If they wish to sort out their pricing the need to sort out their buying in the first instance.
Oh and thats so easy to do?
Problem for the independants is there overheads as always.
Earl
Oh and thats so easy to do?
Problem for the independants is there overheads as always.
Earl
I often see it with independant retailers who either charge you for the pleasure of purchasing via debit card or they don't accept card at all!
Number one rule of selling to retail MAKE IT CONVENIENT FOR YOUR CUSTOMER TO PURCHASE or they will most likely not return to your establishment for a future purchase.
Also branding something as 'made in Britain' is becoming less and less important im afraid. We are victims of our own demands, we want a brand name product but we want it cheap, we also want to be paid decent wages...... I'm afraid that as a result we are pushing out manufacturing in our country. I don't necesarily think it's a good thing but I know where I would get my products produced if I was to sell to the mass market.
Price will become a bigger decision factor in the future, look at insurance, compare the market, the only differentiation on that website is the price you pay for your cover and maybe a few optional extra's - but they are still broken down by price.
Dave
At a guess, I would say that, for us, about 25% of people are obsessed with finding the cheapest - fine, let them use the internet, but I know many will return. I don't do maths, but I would rather spend my time with the 75% who appreciate us and I think 75% is more than 25%