Brad Wardell's views about technology, politics, religion, world affairs, and all sorts of politically incorrect topics.

 

Over the last decade we’ve presented a bit of a mixed message regarding customer care. 

On the one hand, we have broad customer-friendly policies such as very liberal refunds, long-term software support and post-purchase support.

We learned the above lesson from OS/2: Treat your customers as gods because customer loyalty really matters.  I’ve written the details of why we do this here. But the short version is that customer loyalty can make the difference between business survival and death.

…But on the other hand…

I am often very vocal about telling individual customers to go away. And this lesson was learned from OS/2 as well.

You can never appease a zealot. Do not try. Once you discover someone is a zealot, there is no way to win them over and the energy and time you spend trying to win them over is time you could be spending helping more reasonable people. Our policy since we left the OS/2 market is to identify zealots and try to gently (or not so gently) guide them out the door once they have decided that we haven’t lived up to some impossible bar of integrity they have imagined for us.

The OS/2 market had a lot of zealots and when the market started to disintegrate in the late nineties, it became pretty clear that a lot of those zealots expected us to go down with the ship. Because Stardock’s culture formed around the concept of treating people better (i.e. we’ll treat people “right”) , we continued to invest scarce resources in OS/2 software all the way into 1999 largely just to appease these people. We never did. We were “traitors” for making Windows software too.

It took us a long time to understand that these people weren’t buying our products or services because they thought we made good stuff but because we were part of their own “cause” they were fighting in their head and once we had failed in their mind, only a damaging, but purely symbolic, sacrifice on our part would appease them.

And so we try to do right by doing good. That is, make good stuff, price it reasonably and keep our customers happy. And we’ve done pretty well at that over the years.  At the same time, there will always be individuals who will never be appeased and the best path is to cut to the chase and give them their options: Accept things as they are or vote with your wallet and go elsewhere.  It’s a delicate balance but one that I think has, in the bigger scheme of things, has served us well.


Comments (Page 1)
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on Dec 05, 2011

Oh good, I could have sworn this topic was going to end with "...so this is why we are banning Lord Xia"

 

But, yea, you can't please everyone and just like Grandma use to say "Some people you can never make happy, even with your wallet in their hand and your mouth on their crotch."    

on Dec 05, 2011

Interesting concept, that you want to build loyalty but don't want "zealots".

Edit: Shit, I just realized I'm a zealot.

on Dec 05, 2011

LOL.  Hence the mixed message in the first paragraph. It's a delicate balance.  Loyalty != zealotry.

on Dec 05, 2011

Lord Xia
Oh good, I could have sworn this topic was going to end with "...so this is why we are banning Lord Xia"

They did, you're just in denial.

on Dec 05, 2011


DrJBHL - Great link.

on Dec 05, 2011

I don't know what OS/2 is but damn you for screwing it!

on Dec 05, 2011

Turns out, the customer isn't always right. Sometimes, the customer doesn't have a clue.

on Dec 05, 2011

seanw3
I don't know what OS/2 is but damn you for screwing it!

 

OS/2 was an operating system full of fail back in the day    ,Not sure what the post is saying apart from learn from your mistakes and move on I guess ?  

on Dec 05, 2011

Poop

on Dec 05, 2011

Wizard1956
Turns out, the customer isn't always right. Sometimes, the customer doesn't have a clue.

The customer is always right, they will tell you so ... 

I'm still mad at Commodore for destroying my beloved Amiga.

on Dec 05, 2011

SeanSeany

Quoting seanw3, reply 7I don't know what OS/2 is but damn you for screwing it!

 

OS/2 was an operating system full of fail back in the day    ,Not sure what the post is saying apart from learn from your mistakes and move on I guess ?  

Heh.

ONE. OS/2 was not a bad OS. Better than Windows.  

 

TWO. The lesson is that you can't control WHY people buy your stuff. IF they bought it because they were fighting for a cause (like support OS/2 ISVs because they hated Microsoft) you don't "owe" them anything beyond the produce/service you promised. 

on Dec 05, 2011

tazgecko
I'm still mad at Commodore for destroying my beloved Amiga.

Oh the Amiga.  It was so far ahead of PCs and their operating systems, and their games were far superior, it took ages for Nintendo and then PCs to catch up.  But the Amiga cards weren't played right and it died a slow death and eventually got overtaken.

on Dec 05, 2011

Lord Xia
Oh good, I could have sworn this topic was going to end with "...so this is why we are banning Lord Xia"

That can be arranged.....there's even an 'edit button' ....

on Dec 05, 2011

I'm a loyal zealot so please don't ban me.

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