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Showing posts with label miracle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label miracle. Show all posts

Nov 2, 2012

How Seamless Defied Sandy, Kept The Hot Meals Coming, And Inspired Twitter Love

If you think those lo mein noodles that arrived post-hurricane were a miracle, you're not wrong. Here's what Seamless CEO Jonathan Zabusky learned this week about contingency plans and delighting customers amid disaster.

Seamless is a staple for many hungry New Yorkers who lack time or prefer to use their ovens for designer-shoe storage. So as he braced for the worst of Hurricane Sandy, Jonathan Zabusky, CEO of the online food-delivery service, knew he'd best come armed with a multi-pronged contingency plan if he wanted the mutual good feelings to continue.

Times of crisis offer companies memorable opportunities to either pleasantly surprise or royally tick off their customer bases in a way that can reveal something (nice or not so) about the company's leadership and culture. Here, Zabusky shares the most important lessons he learned about staving off complaints, and even delighting customers, during a difficult week.

Get Out In Front Of Disaster

Zabusky had employees begin contacting partner restaurants on Sunday to ask if they were planning on closing due to the storm. That way, Seamless could accurately update its site so customers wouldn’t accidentally be placing orders with closed restaurants.

And before Sandy had even arrived, Seamless employees were already well-versed in various possible scenarios, such as when a restaurant didn’t confirm orders or when order volume was through the roof.

“We rehearsed a number of scenarios ahead of time so everyone would know what to do,” Zabusky says.


Jonathan Zabusky

Cross-Train Employees

Seamless has more than 300 employees across the company who work in different departments, from data entry to restaurant relations to sales and business development. But customer care is the only part of Seamless that hungry customers interact with when they call to complain. So Zabusky, prepared for the influx of disgruntled calls that would inevitably flow through during Sandy, made sure employees from all parts of the company were already cross-trained in how to interact with customers. That way, Seamless was able to staff its customer care team with about 50 additional employees from elsewhere in the company. “In a situation like this, it's not important to have employees entering menu data or making sales,” Zabusky says.

And rather than wait till the last minute to hurriedly train staff, Seamless requires the vast majority of new employees to take a turn through customer care, regardless of what they were hired for, Zabusky says.

“People who come to Seamless will all have some experience with our order monitor and troubled orders so they can experience what it’s like, no matter what their job is,” he says.

Use The Opportunity To Experiment

Normally, Zabusky says Seamless’s partner restaurants have the ability to set their expected delivery time for orders. But during the storm, open restaurants were getting slammed with orders and often unintentionally gave customers misleading delivery times. So he used the opportunity to experiment with what would happen if Seamless told customers to expect longer delivery times.

“We can know ahead of time if a restaurant isn't going to be able to keep up with their delivery estimate timeframe,” Zabusky says. “So in the case of certain neighborhoods with a lot of closings, we proactively raised the delivery estimates for the restaurants that were still open.”

What he found was that as Seamless elongated the expected delivery timelines, it saw a significant decrease in inbound complaint calls because peoples’ expectations were more realistic.

“If you tell someone their order is going to be there in an hour and it gets there sooner, they’ll be much more likely to have their expectations met,” he says.

And happy, fed customers are good for Seamless in any weather, so Zabusky says Seamless will be paying very close attention to experimenting with expected delivery times in the future.

Keep Your Customers In The Loop

Seamless primarily uses Twitter as a marketing vehicle, but Zabusky says it quickly became a critical way to communicate with customers who were having trouble with orders. And when Seamless began interacting with customers through more channels, Zabusky said transparency became the top priority.

"One of the key things we learned last year during Hurricane Irene that's really permeated our business is just being completely transparent with customers," he says. "In general, customers on social media have been very, very reasonable." And in some cases, it went way beyond that, with customers tweeting sonnets of thanks to Seamless delivery people:

A love poem for the Seamless guy who just brought me dinner in a mother fucking hurricane. tinyurl.com/9ajncgk #NewPost— Rachel Bouton (@RaeMacRaeRae) October 30, 2012

Dear New Yorkers Who Don't Cook (i.e. most of us): please consult the @seamless Hurricane Sandy delivery guide: bit.ly/QQgF49— ryan sutton (@qualityrye) October 29, 2012

I ordered food from Seamless and it arrived in 10 minutes. Now that's hurricane recovery that I can believe in!— Nathan Whitaker (@nathanjwhitaker) November 1, 2012


Plan For The Next Disaster, Together

In between all the order monitoring and phone calls, Zabusky is having all Seamless employees document what they’ve learned this week, based on the different strategies they tried and whether or not those strategies resulted in happier customers.

"Each person involved in each of the functional areas is taking copious notes on the different situations and the strategies we tried," he says. "We're formally trying to capture our learnings from this process."


Source : fastcompany[dot]com

Aug 23, 2012

HP Suffers Biggest Loss In Company History, Autonomy Still Requires 'Attention'

If HP investors were expecting Meg Whitman to produce a miracle at HP and turn the company around in 12 months, then last night’s earnings call will have disappointed. The hardware-software giant announced a Q3 loss of US$ 8.9 billion — its biggest quarterly loss in its history with Autonomy dragging on an already poor performance for hardware sales.

HP Job Losses, Write-downs

However, Whitman insists that everything is on track and that what we’re seeing at the moment is the early stages of a turnaround that will see HP back where it belongs in the long term. She warned, though, that it wouldn’t be easy, a fact the 4000 people that lost their jobs in restructuring over the past year will testify to.

Before looking at the information that was given about the performance of its US$ 11.7 billion acquisition last year, let’s take a quick look at some of the figures.

In a pretty weak global economy, HP hasn’t done as well as some of its counterparts, who have also been suffering from weak demand, but have still been able to push the bottom line in the right direction.

The month started badly enough for investors when earlier on HP announced that it would be posting a bigger-than expected charge in the third quarter in relation to its workforce reduction plans. The idea is that 27,000 people worldwide would go, and with four thousand gone over the year, the costs of this look pretty steep, although figures on this are not available.

A further 11,500 are expected to leave the company in fiscal year 2012 — which ends at the end of October — as opposed to the 9,000 that HP had originally announced. Another 15,500 employees will be let go through October 2014.

Also in this quarter — and the reason behind the US$ $8.9 billion loss it announced for the quarter — are the plans announced to take an $8 billion charge to reflect the shrinking value of Electronic Data Systems, a technology consulting service it bought for US$ 13 billion in 2008.

Third-Quarter Revenues

Overall, revenue for the third quarter fell 5 percent year over year to US$ 29.7 billion, US $500 million less than analysts had expected. Without the write-downs and other once-off costs, though, HP did OK in a very sluggish market.

Profits without these costs would have been US$ 1.97 billion, down 9 percent year over year, but in keeping with what’s happening in the wider global market as businesses in many geographies hold off on spending until the direction of the global economy finally becomes clear.

Another highlight was that software sales rose 18 percent to $973 million, driven by last year's acquisition of Autonomy, even if licenses grew by only 2%. Software-related support revenue was up 16 percent and software services rose 65 percent.

The PC market also remains weak, with PC revenue down 10% year-over-year, driven by this weakness and an aggressive pricing from competitors, Whitman said. She added:

The reality is we're locked in serious, competitive battles, but we're determined to win. We will fight to sustain our leadership position, particularly in the Commercial space, while remaining focused on profitable growth. To this end, we are executing targeted marketing and promotional programs to support the business in Q4.”

Autonomy, HP

For information management professionals — and for the financially bloody-minded — the real interest in these figures was what has happened with Autonomy; after all, while HP did spend a huge whack of money to buy it, it did buy one of the more interesting products in the information management space with IDOL.

 

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Source : cmswire[dot]com