BlackBerry – Taking Their Eye Off the Ball?
We prefer to find good examples of customer centricity to make our point.
However, sometimes examples of poor alignment with customer values can serve as helpful warning beacons.
First, I must say that I love BlackBerry products, they are reliable and do the job.
Today I was delighted to see BlackBerry had corrected their lack of a Desktop Manager for Mac, which has caused me countless hours of grief in trying to sync my PDA and Entourage on my Mac. I was excited, so I followed the link and downloaded the software.
Here is my experience:
1. The download did not include a pdf of the instructions. I went to the website to find the instructions and also found release notes – Cool.
2. Oops, the release notes say that when synchronizing with Entourage there are several unresolved issues with data integrity, the same ones that were giving me grief with the third party software.
3. I decided to call the contact center to ask if the release notes were still current and/or to get advice on whether I should make the switch. No phone number listed for customer support. They have self help and forums, I spent 15 minutes looking for an answer then gave up.
4. Decided to send an email to the support desk with my question – I received a reply saying the email was not delivered, we have self-help options or payed-for-support.
- Why would a device come without necessary software to synch to well known computers?
- Why would they deliver software without operating instructions?
- Why would they deliver software that does not work, and not let you know before you download?
- Why would they lead customers to believe there is a support email address when there is not?
- Why would they consider reliable customer support for business people something beyond their responsibility?
The answer could be simple, and it can happen to any company in the blink of an eye:
Sometimes we may not consider the effects of our business decisions on the customer experience.
Perhaps even less if our products are leading the market.
Well, it’s not about the product, its about the customer and the company’s alignment to their values.
My 7 years of BlackBerry usage mean nothing if I don’t feel the company is ready to support me when I need them.
The point here is that great companies can quickly loose their footing simply by forgetting that we are no longer in a product economy.
Products are great, but no longer brand differentiators. The differentiator is now the customer experience due to the company’s integrity of purpose.
My partner Donna Root, said it perfectly yesterday : ” A company’s alignment to their purpose is critical because in an experience economy customers care about “HOW” companies win.”
Your customers have evolved. Their criteria for loyalty has shifted to a more holistic view. They care about what company’s stand for and about their authenticity in that purpose.
What does your company stand for?
Rudy Vidal
Committed to XCL

1 comment
Rudy, I wonder the same thing? What happened at Blackberry to cause them to remove the Human or Emotional Quotient from their support of their product. The Blackberry is a great device. All of my friends know that I am very partial to Apple products, but like many, my company has a policy that is geared to Blackberries. I am partial to Apple products for a reason and it has nothing to do with the fact that they have wonderful product. It has to do with the fact they have exceptional customer support and service. Oh by the way. When I bought my iMac about a year and a half ago, I purchased the support package… I think it cost me 100 dollars for 3 years at the time. That is about 33.33 per year.. or less than 3 dollars a month if my math is right. But when I have a problem, they are there. On the phone, email, chat.. you name it or I can go to my nearest Apple store and one of the “Geniuses” will help me.
As you can see this is not FREE support but it sure is Valuable support and I am willing to pay for it. They make it so it is a no brainer for me to say 100 dollars for 3 years.. sure.. great price.. great value.. I’ll take it.
I wonder why companies dont get it? I’m with you. I know that as time continues the company I work for is getting it more and more. They do in some areas, but fall short in others.