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This is an archive article published on September 4, 2011
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Opinion Customer,demand your due

In my different consumer service experience research in home décor and purchase,I discovered a nightmarish example of installing a flat TV at home.

September 4, 2011 01:34 AM IST First published on: Sep 4, 2011 at 01:34 AM IST

In my different consumer service experience research in home décor and purchase,I discovered a nightmarish example of installing a flat TV at home. It’s not like old times when you place the TV set and fix an antenna. Now the dealer brings the set,but not everything else. You have to wait for the company representative to bring the fixture to fix the TV set on the wall. Next the DTH service provider with his set-of-box has to come to connect you to different TV channels. Then you have to have your own electrician around also to set up wires for the surround sound speakers,amplifier and connect the DVD with the TV monitor. Guess who has to coordinate among these four sets of service people? You’re right! You have to take a couple of days off from work for this. You’ve just made an exorbitant full payment,yet there’s nobody taking responsibility for installation. The DTH has to match the TV output which has to match the DVD player and amplifier. And there you are stuck in the house waiting endlessly as nobody keeps the promised time. If you try to be clever,in advance plead with and juggle everyone’s time,fix appointments with them so they arrive together,you can be sure you’ll be outwitted. Two of them will arrive 2-3 hours late,another may not show up that day. Excuses will vary from traffic jams,motorcycle tyre puncture,rains flooding streets,public transport too crowded to take to too much work,the head office does not care for us,and so on.

The worst is yet to come: shoddy craftsmanship. Each service provider will send two young people who are clever,but seem like trainees with raw behavioural skills. There’s hell to pay from wiring to programming to getting connection. The early comer can barely set up his system,but he’ll not touch the other service man’s area saying,“That’s not my job.” Then you wonder,“Should I have paid so much for a world class brand associated with so many service providers with no coordination?” If you are not demanding,they can leave you a patch-up job.

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The consumer electronics retailer should coordinate the way an automobile garage provides service after sales,managing different features from different vendors. TV brands promote hallucinating pictures in the showroom for the customer’s instant buying decision. Yet scant attention is paid to synchronising among servicemen to make your installation hassle-free.

Japanese and Korean companies need to give rigorous training to build up their Indian servicemen’s knowledge. Otherwise customers somehow feel cheated. Apart from better entertainment,as an integral part of design and invention the flat TV has another purpose. With craftsmanship and price so much higher than the old TV,isn’t it the TV maker’s responsibility to fit it in the customer’s house without messiness? The customer’s tolerance level is too high in India,so such hardware and software companies get away doing what they want. Every customer should revolt at this kind of unreliability.

In developed countries,it’s the customer’s unlimited expectation that’s obliged industry to be inventive and deliver on-time and sustaining value. If you don’t raise your expectation bar,industry will not raise the craftsmanship of delivery people. Let me narrate a personal experience. When I was studying graphic design in Paris,Western calligraphy fascinated me. I learnt its grammar and alchemy,right from Gutenburg,under the tutorship of world famous Hungarian typographer Paul Gabor (1930-1992) who’d invented several fonts. He trained me to study not the black fonts but the white space of typography. This white balance harmonises typography letter by letter,word by word,line by line and paragraph by paragraph. Gabor was a tough task master. Only five of us from the original class of 30 survived to learn that the width of words A to Z is not the same,the capital and small letters zigzag in a word. You need passion,desire and learning hunger to sustain with him. After two years,he advised me to work in a type print shop where old-style steel letters were used before computers arrived. I worked for free for 3 hours 4 days a week for 6 months and achieved control over craftsmanship in spacing,lining and white balance in calligraphy and typesetting. Since then I could inspire my team in that all the brands we have created in the world have been hand designed. This is a proactive call,clients will never ask for it. But it protects the copyright of their brands so that their authenticity cannot be challenged.

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As a Customer,everything is in your hands. Do you,for example,check the homogeneity in the floor tiles of the expensive apartment you’ve bought? Every joint section showcases craftsmanship of design. When customers increase their demand,service will improve and the selling proposition become of tension free quality and aesthetics. But you have to impose your requirement before making payment or you’ll achieve nothing. Close the deal but pay after the work is done. Your exigency will alert the manufacturer.

Shombit Sengupta is an international creative business strategy consultant to top management.
Reach him at http://www.shiningconsulting.com

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