The most important 2% of your customers

Approximately 2% of your customers will rip you off. They will game your system. They will do everything to gain financial win from your pockets. They will lie to you. Cheat on you. Pretend they’re angry. Neglect you. Won’t pay. Complain about you out in the open, just to put you under pressure. They will demand to speak to your boss. Will yell at you and ask you if you know who they are. Well, you get the idea.

I was reminded by this last week when I tried to buy at ticket at the Gent train station. I went to the NMBS ticket machine, selected a train ticket to Brussels and paid by bank card. However, the machine failed to print en went out of order. I had no choice but going to the ticket counter. The service employee there said he couldn’t help me, couldn’t give me my money back and handed me a standard contact form to send to the NMBS headquarters to complain.

The employee was able to see the out-of-order message on the machine from his counter (that would at least strengthen my case), I was wearing a suit (I guess that would make me a more trustworthy person in some people’s minds) and over the last year, I bought tickets with him at least 15 more times (he could have recognized me, there aren’t so many Dutch people buying tickets to Amsterdam every week at 6h00 in the morning). But that all wasn’t enough for him.
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But really, why would I lie to him?

And then I thought about the 2% rule. The 2% of the customers that probably tried to rip the NMBS off and why this employee was not allowed to give me my money back.

It’s not about this 2%. It is about what you do with the other 98%. Too many companies let the 2% of their customer dictate how they service the majority of their customers.
And treating all your customers like possible cheats won’t bring the 2% down; it will actually stimulate the 98% to look for compensation and ways to cheat the system as well.

And it doesn’t have to be this way.

  • Zappos has a 365-day return policy for their shoes. Tony Hsieh, their CEO, admits in his book Delivering Happiness: A Path to Profits, Passion, and Purpose (if you haven’t read it yet – read it) that 2% of their customers will send in their shoes after a year. So that they had a full year of free shoes. They will try to game the system. However, the remaining 98% of Zappos’ customers are so happy with their return policy (and are nudged into buying more) that they make up for it.
  • At my favorite bar in Gent, Cafe Rene, approximately 2% of the people on their terrace doesn’t pay or doesn’t pay enough. It would make sense to let people pay every time they get their food and drinks. However, keeping an account of the table and paying when you leave is such a more convenient way of spending your time on a terrace. And I bet that paying later nudges people in spending more then when you confront them with the bill when they order another round.
  • Many insurance companies (e.g. Interpolis) fix your damage first and arrange the details later. I guess at least 2% of their customers tries to rip them off. But that in no way adds up to the great satisfaction you feel as a customers when things are handled quick and without hassle.

The cheating and lying 2% of your customers are your most important customers. They help to make the difference between companies that act from fear of losing some money on 2% of their customers and the companies that see an opportunity to make a decent profit from the rest of them.

2 comments
  1. It’s those 2% who decide if a company is going to mistrust the good 98% or not. Some companies have no problems with this. Most will want to cut costs everywhere.

    Sidenote: On public transportation in Brussels, probably half of all travelers never pays for a ticket. (Guilty.) But I know I won’t complain either when they go on strike. Imho, the customer can set the price for what they think a product or service is worth.

    You see a similar trend with some restaurants who let their guests decide how much they want to pay. Betcha those 2% don’t hurt their business as all. 🙂

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There Is No Indispensable Man

There Is No Indispensable Man
by Saxon N. White Kessinger, Copyright 1959

Sometime when you're feeling important;
Sometime when your ego's in bloom
Sometime when you take it for granted
You're the best qualified in the room,

Sometime when you feel that your going
Would leave an unfillable hole,
Just follow these simple instructions
And see how they humble your soul;

Take a bucket and fill it with water,
Put your hand in it up to the wrist,
Pull it out and the hole that's remaining
Is a measure of how you will be missed.

You can splash all you wish when you enter,
You may stir up the water galore,
But stop and you'll find that in no time
It looks quite the same as before.

The moral of this quaint example
Is do just the best that you can,
Be proud of yourself but remember,
There's no indispensable man.

[Via]