mba6130 u06a1 professional challenge - ew hirshfeld
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Running head: MBA6130 U06A1 PROFESSIONAL CHALLENGE
MBA6130 U06A1 PROFESSIONAL CHALLENGE
Eric W Hirshfeld
Capella University
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Abstract
The challenges that face companies in todays economic environment are innumerable, and
come in all sizes. Remembering what Merry Holmes, Store Human Resource Manager, Home
Depot, says about customer service helps keeps things basic, customer service is not one
big thing, but a million little things and really puts in context the idea that our customer
love, and hate, the small facets of our business. Telephone communications is one of those
small things that can have a customer building or customer destroying affect. The simplicity
of the device, as well as the way in which it can be used to build our business, places a
burden on those in leadership positions to ensure optimal usage. When we fail to provide the
necessary direction, the results are all our own.
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Contentsoverview.................................................................................................................................5
Key Challenge.........................................................................................................................5
Cost-Benefits Summary...........................................................................................................6
Measurement Strategy............................................................................................................6
Surveys...............................................................................................................................6
Voice of the Customer.....................................................................................................7
Exit Survey......................................................................................................................7
Store Manager Survey.....................................................................................................7
Install Survey...................................................................................................................7
Findings...................................................................................................................................8
Busy Signals........................................................................................................................8
No Answer...........................................................................................................................8
Inappropriate Transfer.........................................................................................................8
Rudeness.............................................................................................................................9
Failure to Follow Up.............................................................................................................9
Summary of Your Recommendations......................................................................................9
Training...............................................................................................................................9
Awareness.........................................................................................................................10
Accountability....................................................................................................................10
Conclusion.............................................................................................................................10
References............................................................................Error! Bookmark not defined.
Figure 1. Candidate Process (Identification) Worksheet........................................................13
Figure 2. Process Improvement (Idea) Worksheet.................................................................14
Figure 3. Cause and Effect Diagram (Fishbone)....................................................................15
Figure 4. Phone call Flowchart...............................................................................................16
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Figure 4. Measurement Strategy Worksheet.........................................................................17
Figure 5. OIP Implementation Evaluation and Recommendation Worksheet.........................18
Figure 6. Store Manager Survey............................................................................................19
Figure 7. Exit Survey.............................................................................................................20
Figure 8. Online Receipt Customer Survey............................................................................21
Figure 9. Install Completion (1000 Report) Survey................................................................21
Figure 9. Install Completion (1000 Report) Survey
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OVERVIEW
The initial contact with a customer can have a great impact on keeping or losing a customer;
the initial contact cannot solely win a customer for life but it can set conditions in motion
that enable later events to bring about a substantially positive outcome. The phone systems
employed by The Home Depot, and how it is used by associates at each store, fits this idea;
impactful and yet simple.
Poor customer service, as provided through the usage of our phone system, can have quite
detrimental effects on the success of our business. But, it is only the leadership that stands
to blame for allowing such negative impacts to persist. Understanding the problem, the
contributing factors and the correct methods of addressing these events is vital to the
remedy. It is however, like most all challenges that businesses encounter, the ownership of
the problem that can truly be seen as the opportunity.
In many stores, the phone system is looked at, and used, as the great tool that was
envisioned by Alexander Graham Bell, a tool that greatly enhances the speed and accuracy
of our abilities. When the system is not respected nor used to the optimal level, the
enterprise failing in such a manner is likely to suffer reduced efficiency and reduced profits.
Upon my arrival at my current location, it soon became apparent that the phone system was
seen as a hindrance instead of an asset; associates turned down the volume, didnt turn it
on as all, set it down on a shelf or desk when it was time for break, or even just refused to
use it in any professional manner.
KEY CHALLENGE
Home Depot relies on customers to give us direction as to how we can make their shopping
experience better, even world class. Each store manager has the ability to log into the
customer survey website to extract survey scores and comments. It is these comments that
have bolstered an already existing complaint about our phone system. It is not being utilized
to the fullest potential; in fact, the system frustrates customers and associates alike.
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From calls ringing into busy lines that result in having to hang up and dial back into the
store, to phones that ring without answer, the problems abound. All the opportunities (or
problems) can be traced back to a number of contributing factors, and usually, in turn, a
contributing associate. With the recent investment of over $64 million into an updated and
advanced phone system[Burritt, 2010], there is no reason for our customers to have a bad
experience when trying to reach the store or a particular department. Hours of training and
millions in technological investment has not improved the experience, as far as calling on
the phone is concerned. The great system has dramatically enhanced the experience once
the customer gets in the store, but getting them here without frustrating them is the hard
part. Figure 4 models the basic process of an incoming call.
COST-BENEFITS SUMMARY
The difficulty in measuring the actual cost benefit of a poorly utilized phone system is that
lost sales are likely rarely, if ever, accurately calculated. Specific and accurate data is just
readily available to build a model on; a few real and validated arguments for exceptional
customer service are available. It is know that the average customer spends approximately
$80,000 in a lifetime at the Home Depot. We also know, through previously validated
research at the corporate level in Atlanta, that for every customer that is treated poorly,
they will tell their relatives, friends and neighbors; of those, ten will follow their advice. That
equates to a loss of $880,000 from one bad experience.
A statistical calculation in a related area is as follows: one, we at Home Depot know that
40% of all of the customers that walk through our doors will leave without purchasing
anything; two, if each associate working any particular shift during any given day, were to
covert one of those non-purchasing customers to a sale through exceptional customer
service, that a store the size of my store would, using average customer count, average
ticket, and average number of associates in the store each day, generate an additional
$2,000,000 per year. In looking at these two knowns, the cost-benefit summary for just
answering the phone correctly, and turning it on when one is suppose to, can have dramatic
affects.
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MEASUREMENT STRATEGY
Findings were extracted from various surveys and over the period of 30 days. Data was
pooled and evaluated; some data provided had little substantive value, while other data
serves as a great resource for improvements.
Surveys
There are four different surveys used within my store that are used for measuring customer
satisfaction. Each of the four was developed to extract comments and suggestions from
different kinds of customers. One by itself provides limited data, limited reliability, and with
limited application. The four are: Voice of the Customer (VOC) Receipt Survey, given to
customer upon purchase or return of merchandise; Exit Survey, solicited at exit prior to
leaving the building; Floor Walk Surveys, conducted by the store manager walks sales floor,
speaks to customers and asks for feedback; and Install Completion Calls, which are
managed by the Customer Order Specialists use the 1000 report to select customers to call.
Voice of the Customer
VOC surveys participation is solicited by store associates, but must be completed outside of
the store on customers computers, and by themselves. Company Code of Conduct and
Standard Operating Procedures requires that associates are not allowed to complete the
surveys, not even when they purchase merchandise themselves.
Exit Survey
Exit surveys are worked and completed by the department supervisors and salaried
managers while standing at the entrance and exit, engaging customers leaving the store.
They are asked if they would like to participate in a survey to help our store improve the
customers experience. If customers agree, they are asked four simple questions that
provide simple feedback that can have maximum impact.
Store Manager Survey
Store manager surveys, or floor walk surveys, are handed out only by the store manager.
The store manager will ask customers if they would like to participate in a nine question
survey in exchange for a $10.00 discount on their visits purchase. If they agree, the store
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manager will give them the survey to fill out during their visit; once they complete the
survey; all they need to do to receive their discount is to present the survey to the cashier
upon checkout. The cashier will contact the store manager as soon as the customer exits
and hand off the survey.
Install Survey
Install completion survey, or 1000 report follow up, is conducted by the Custom Order
Specialist from an automatically generated report based on installations that were
completed the day prior. The survey results are kept in binder and reviewed by the salary
managers each day. The customer order specialist is also given the chance to ask the
customer how the telephone communication process was during the installation process,
and if there are any suggestions they can improve the experience.
FINDINGS
Not all of the survey results provided a eat amount of help. Once the data was input into a
management pool, sorted and manipulated, the following items are common occurrences
and damaging to our service level: busy signals, ringing with no pickup, transfer to wrong
department, perceived rude conduct by answering associate, and failure to follow up when a
return call is promised.
Busy Signals
The busy signal was found to occur when a customer dials an extension directly from the
outside and that phone is not turned on for the day or the battery has died. In this scenario,
the customer must hang up and call the store back. In most cases, the customer thinks it is
their fault and tries the same process over but finds the same result. Phone assignments are
basic and easy to understand; the first digit of the extension is the number one; the last two
digits of the three digit extension number is the department number. Since each department
has a phone, the issue of not having enough phones for every merchandising department is
not valid. Should a phone become unserviceable, each store has a small contingent of
floater phones to take up any slack. When replacement phones need to be ordered, they
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usually arrive within 24 to 48 hours. Extra batteries are plentiful; the store has 20 extra
batteries, so there should always be enough to support operations.
No Answer
Ringing without pickup results from one of two situations, first is the team member has
turned down the volume to the Mute level and the ringer cannot be heard or the fact that he
team member is just failing to answer the phone for any number of reasons. Associates
should not be muting the phone, as it has a vibrate mode where a ringer is muted but the
phone can be felt by its vibrations. This mode will not interrupt conversations or meetings,
but still allows the holder to know a call is coming in.
Inappropriate Transfer
When a call comes into the store, and the phone operator identifies the caller as needing a
particular department, that call can be sent through immediately. If the call bounces back,
the destination phone either didnt pick up or the phone rang busy. Should the phone
operator know that the phone is operational, the obligation is to try to help the customer
themselves or to take a name and number so a capable associate can call back and help the
customer. If the operator is unsure if the destination phone is working, they may try to assist
or have a capable associate call the customer back. The correct answer is not to just forward
the call to a department that will answer the phone; doing so will put the customer in
contact with an associate, but in contact with one that is not able to immediate assist the
customer in most cases.
Rudeness
When a customer perceives rude or unsatisfactory behavior over the phone, it is often the
result of unintentional or accidental actions. It was discovered that in most cases, the action
that precipitated the customer complaint was conduct or language that was intended for a
fellow associate; in these cases, the associate didnt see the call as one coming from an
outside line or one that was transferred from the phone center. When the activity was not
accidental but merely poor phone etiquette, a coaching discussion or other levels of
accountability wasnt undertaken by the supervisor or manager.
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Failure to Follow Up
Our customers understand the delays and other problems with orders happen, they merely
ask to be kept informed of the situation. It is when we fail to communicate with them that
we find ourselves in a position that can dramatically damage our reputation and adversely
affect our future survival. When these occasions arise, where our team members fail to
follow up, leaders have a moral obligation to teach, coach and train them to success and, if
necessary, hold them accountable for their failures. When we shirk this responsibility, not
only do we take the burden upon ourselves but we also set in motion those behaviors that
will result in future continue the actions as if we approved them as acceptable.
SUMMARY OF YOUR RECOMMENDATIONS
Most of the supporting data did point to a couple of easily managed areas; suffice it to say,
that the areas for improvement actually deal more with leadership than a broken process.
The lack thereof will continue to provide tacit approval for unacceptable behavior. The
leadership centered areas for improvement are training, awareness and accountability.
Training, awareness and accountability are three areas that can truly affect the
opportunities identified.
Training
The training segment must include four separate, generations or seasons, and is, what I call,
the training model: book work or reading associated to the area of study; demonstration by
the trainer, so the trainee can see it in action; group work where the trainee and trainer
work the task together; demonstration by the trainee, where the trainer can closely observe
the trainee in action; lastly is the evaluation, where the trainee is periodically observed and
evaluated by the trainer and supervisor.
Awareness
Awareness of circumstances, surroundings and events can serve as a great tool to keep us
on track with our goals and objectives. As we provide information to the team on feedback
and the solutions to opportunities, they will respond accordingly and the awareness alone
becomes a correction tool. When we fail to give the feedback and information to our teams,
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we fail to allow them to fix the problems or address the opportunities themselves. Since
each of our team members comes to work to make a difference, and not to fail, they are
equipped with, at least minimal, motivation to affect change.
Accountability
Accountability is nothing more than follow-up, with the added step of documenting
conversations and training, when necessary. Accountability is how we identify and document
improvement areas, and is critical to remember that this can come in different forms.
Accountability can be simple questions, the opportunity to work beside the team member, or
all the way to a documented counseling for failures in behavior or performance. The intent of
all this is change culture and behavior, not lose the associate to frustration or termination;
not properly conducted, the training, awareness, and accountability can hurt morale rather
than improve the customer experience is not properly executed.
CONCLUSION
Leadership is not wanting to endure difficult times or trials, but rather the desire to dive
head first into the chaos of the day to find the difficulties and trials, take them head on and
fix them. This requires leaders to be cut from a different cloth and have an integrity focused
character. Without this, it is easy to take the path of least resistance when encountering
opportunities and challenges.
When dealing with seemingly simple trials, we often uncover that the leaders bear some if
not most of the burden for the problem existing in the first place. When we allow something
a simple as telephone protocols to go unchecked, the team members that have less than
adequate integrity and ideas will push the bounds further and further. The failure to address
the telephone issues listed herein can have far reaching consequences that ultimately result
in lost sales and a damaged corporate reputation. This is owned by the leader, no one else.
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WORKS CITED
Burritt, C. (2010, January 12). Business and Technology-Home Depot spending $60M on
handheld devices. Retrieved January 14, 2011, from The Seattle Times:
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/businesstechnology/2010776052_homedepot13.html
Clothier, M. (2009, May 24). Catering to Customers. Bloomberg New , p. 3.
Katz, B. R. (1960). Toward a More Effictive Enterprise. Harvard Business Review , 80-102.
Krajewski, L. J., Ritzman, L. P., & Malhotra, M. K. (2010). Operations Management, Ninth
Edition. Upper Saddle River: Pearson Prentice Hall.
the Ateneo Economics Association (AEA). (2008, May 31).Analyzing The Rice Crisis in the
Philippines. Retrieved February 07, 2011, from The official blog of the Ateneo Economics
Association : http://ateneoeconomics.wordpress.com/2008/05/31/analyzing-rice-crisis-in-the-
philippines/
The Home Depot. (2005). 2004 Annual Report. Atlanta: The Home Depot.
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FIGURE 1. CANDIDATE PROCESS (IDENTIFICATION) WORKSHEET
Provide a brief synopsis of your company: The Home Depot is the worlds largest home
improvement retailer; with 2244 stores in the United States, the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, the territory of the U.S. Virgin Islands and the territory of Guam, in Canada, in Mexico
and in China, and with over 300,000 associates, The Home Depot is truly a international
company. During this unstable economic period throughout the world, the company
reported third quarter sales, FY2010, at $16.6 billion; a 1.4 percent increase from the third
quarter of fiscal 2009. In FY2009, during the depth of the recession, the company saw over
$66 billion in sales; this was roughly a 7.2% decrease compared to the previous year, but
with the control on operating costs, shareholders enjoyed a $1.57 diluted earnings per
share.
ProcessesandDescriptions
Importance Scope PartiesInvolved
Priority Overall Impact Costs If NotImproved
Phone System Critical Ourcustomersutilize thephone systemto check onproduct, callon specialorders, or justcheck on
promotions orevents.
All storeassociates
Urgent Diminishedcustomersatisfaction, inturn reducedcustomer base
Negativecomps,leading toreduced salesand loss ofstaffing as itis related tosales adjustedhours
DeliveryService
Important Service afterthe sale,customerloyalty basedon the overallexperience
All storeassociates,from thesalesassociate tothe deliverywill-callcoordinator
Urgent When servicegoes bad afterthe sale, theimpact isdramatic due toword of mouthand personalrecommendation
With $80,000averagecustomerlifetime sales,coupled withthe idea thatthey willinfluence 10people, totalimpact perincident couldbe $880,000
Will CallSystem
Important Customerswill come
pickup theirpurchasedproduct, theyexpect it tobe readywhen theywant it
The sellingassociate and
thedepartmentsupervisor
Important Customerswould not make
high dollarpurchases, andreduce thegrowth potentialsince averageticket growth isexpected
Positivegrowth is the
basicexpectationof theshareholder;without this,the storesfuture is notas likely
SeasonalRecovery
Moderate The storeappearance,being grandopening
Recoveryteam on theFreight Team,recovery
Important Lower Voice of the Customerscores, loweraverage ticket,
Negativecomps,reducedsales, and
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ready, andhaving theproduct onthe shelf forthecustomersvisit
DepartmentSupervisors,OperationsAssistantStoreManager
loss of customerloyalty
potential tolose ability tokeep storeopen
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FIGURE 2. PROCESS IMPROVEMENT (IDEA) WORKSHEET
Selected Process: Phone System Usage
Problem Statement
Customers vocalized dissatisfaction in the wayin which our phone system works. They call in,dial a specific department from the menu, andthe call rings busy and they are required to callback, or the department they are calling justdoesnt answer the phone and the call will gettransferred to a department that is not able toanswer their questions. Customers callingdepartments and leave messages will likely notget a call back. Or, inappropriate telephoneanswering protocol are used.
Issue Background
Home Depot does not use a voicemail feature.Calls are routed to departments that they select,either by waiting for a prompt or even dialingthe extension directly. When associates do notturn their phones on, turn the volume up,replace the battery when low, or even answerthe phone when it rings, customers callmanagement with complaints as well as entercomplaints on the voice of the customersurveys. As topics have been addressed in thepast, the quality of phone usage temporarilyrises, but inevitably the quality tends todegrade.
ImplicationWith a continuing poor usage of the phonesystem, customer service quality will continue tobe poor. Results from such poor quality:
-Drop in sales-Customers sharing poor experience-Poor communication, internally-Reduced staffing needs-Closure of store
Desired OutcomeThe desired outcome is for the store associatesto enthusiastically engage one another aboutproper usage of the phone system; peerpressure sometimes works best in holdingassociates accountable. Communicationbetween departments and external customerswill rise to the level that complaints of the phonesystem become the exception instead of thenorm.
-Increased sales-Wider range of usage of the system-Ease of reaching associates-Weeding out of those associates failing to adapt
-Phone system is seen as a tool for successinstead of a barrier
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FIGURE 3. CAUSE AND EFFECT DIAGRAM (FISHBONE)
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FIGURE 4. PHONE CALL FLOWCHART
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FIGURE 4. MEASUREMENT STRATEGY WORKSHEET
Pictorial Representation of the Revised Flowchart:
Note: Submit your completed pictorial flowchart diagram for review to your instructor.
Flowchart changes were minimal; no feedback from peers concerning needed changes.Measurement Strategy What qualitative or quantitative measures will be used and what frequencyof measure?
Continued use of the Voice of the Customer survey as well as store manager surveys of customersvia sale completion calls, sales floor interaction, and exit surveys. One question on the customdesigned questions will be directly related to the quality of phone system. VOC results are updatedand available weekly. For customer calls after sale completion, the store will continue to use the1000 Report which automatically generates daily, and lists completed install orders (or orders thathave install labor charges associated with them). Store manager conducts a minimum of fivesurveys on the sales floor each day. The exit surveys are completed by the Front End Supervisor,Department Supervisors, Assistant Managers, and Store Manager; on weekends, the store has a goalof completing a minimum of 25 exit surveys.
Impact on the Existing Problem Statement:
There will have no adverse impact on the existing problems statement. Survey execution will beconducted by the store leadership team, and the balance of associates is unaware of the surveyquestions. Survey results are shared with the leadership team as appropriate subjects areencountered.
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FIGURE 5. OIP IMPLEMENTATION EVALUATION AND RECOMMENDATION
WORKSHEET
List of potential data collection tools and techniques:
VOC Receipt Survey; given to customer upon purchase or return of merchandise.Exit Survey; solicited at exit prior to leaving the building.Floor Walk; store manager walks sales floor, speaks to customers and asks for feedback.Install Completion Calls; Customer Order Specialists use the 1000 report to selectcustomers to call.
Your selected data collection tool and technique: (Include a realistic sample of yourcollection tool.)
The sample surveys are illustrated in the below figures 6 through 9.A description of your data collection process: (Who, When, Where, and How)
1. VOC surveys participation is solicited by store associates, but must becompleted outside of the store on customers computers, and by themselves.Company Code of Conduct and Standard Operating Procedures requires thatassociates are not allowed to complete the surveys, not even when they purchasemerchandise themselves.
2. Exit surveys are worked and completed by the department supervisors andsalaried managers while standing at the entrance and exit, engaging customersleaving the store. They are asked if they would like to participate in a survey tohelp our store improve the customers experience. If customers agree, they areasked four simple questions that provide simple feedback that can have maximumimpact.
3. Store manager surveys, or floor walk surveys, are handed out only by thestore manager. The store manager will ask customers if they would like toparticipate in a nine question survey in exchange for a $10.00 discount on theirvisits purchase. If they agree, the store manager will give them the survey to fillout during their visit; once they complete the survey, all they need to do to receivetheir discount is to present the survey to the cashier upon checkout. The cashierwill contact the store manager as soon as the customer exits and hand off thesurvey.
4. Install completion survey, or 1000 report follow up, is conducted by theCustom Order Specialist from an automatically generated report based oninstallations that were completed the day prior. The survey results are kept inbinder and reviewed by the salary managers each day. The customer orderspecialist is also given the chance to ask the customer how the telephonecommunication process was during the installation process, and if there are anysuggestions they can improve the experience.
How have the results enhanced, supported, or changed each of the following:
The Problem Statement
None
Flowchart
None
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Measurement Strategy
Due to the anticipated volume ofmeasurement data, collected informationwill be consolidated and entered into aMicrosoft Excel spreadsheet for sorting and
data manipulation.
Anticipated Recommendations
Training, awareness and accountability arelikely to be the recommendations.Accountability can come in different forms,and as such needs to be reviewed andmonitored. The intent is not to loseassociates but rather change culture; notproperly conducted, the accountability canhurt morale rather than improve thecustomer experience.
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FIGURE 6. STORE MANAGER SURVEY
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FIGURE 7. EXIT SURVEY
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FIGURE 8. ONLINE RECEIPT CUSTOMER SURVEY
FIGURE 9. INSTALL COMPLETION (1000 REPORT) SURVEY