Feb 16, 20228:40 PM - edited Apr 1, 202210:11 AM
HubSpot Employee
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
Revenue Operations, or RevOps, is integral to taking an inbound approach to business and speeding up your company’s flywheel.
Why are those important? Let’s define terms first:
Inbound is a method of attracting, engaging, and delighting people to grow a business that provides value and builds trust.
The flywheel is a model adapted by HubSpot to explain the momentum you gain when you align your entire organization around delivering a remarkable customer experience. Rather than thinking of your business as a funnel, with leads coming in at the top and customers coming out at the bottom, think about your business as a circle — as a flywheel.
When thinking about how to spin your company’s flywheel faster with RevOps, there are two important concepts to keep in mind:
Force is what allows your business to scale by spinning your flywheel faster and faster. This looks like when your customer has a great customer experience and tells their friends and colleagues about it.
Friction is what grinds your business to a halt, if not addressed. This is when your company provides your customers with a bad customer experience, and they also tell their friends and colleagues about it. In turn, this slows down your flywheel.
Here’s what I’d love to hear:
Share a time when you had an amazing customer experience and you saw a company grow faster and faster because of their wonderful customer care.
Share a time when you had a poor customer experience (please don’t name names or organizations) and how you saw that type of poor care affect their business.
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
Great customer experience: I have been working out with a Gym for the past 3 years. One day, I had not slept well and yet I woke up early in the morning to show up. I was very tired and I did not have the energy to follow the workout plan. One of the instructors asked me to go home and get some sleep so that I'd be able to get through the day. This happened a few more times and I got annoyed because I felt bad to go all the way back without getting my workout done. I started making it a point ot sleep properly so that I can get a good 1 hour workout. In the next 3 months, this started becoming a habit and my performance improved gradually. As a customer, I was happy ultimately.
While typing this I am not sure whether this was a Force or a Friction. The instructor being well aware of the client's state is a Force and asking the client to go back is a Friction. Would love to know more thoughts here 🙂
Poor customer experience: I ordered food from a restaurant recently and I had forgotten to specify the dietary constraints that my friend has. I called up in the next 5 mins and the phone line was busy. I had to wait for 5 more minutes and make another call. When the call was picked up I apologised for missing to mention the specifications and asked if it is possible to customise. Instead of addressing my concerns directly, he said they can only take customisation requests if it was placed within the next 5 minutes from the time of order and I had called up only after 10 minutes. I tried to explain that the line was busy and then he started going through the call logs and said I had only called them 6 mins later and not 5 minutes. A simple explanation saying that the chef has started preparing would have saved a lot of time and energy for both of us.
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
Navan (formerly Trip Actions) is incredibly easy to use AND knocks it out of the park with customer service via chat. They're always available, patient, and take time to understand the actual issue - not simply read through a script or behave robotically. Even though we use it for company travel booking, I've also used it for personal trip booking for these reasons.
Conversely, we have a home warranty, and they've made it incredibly easy to file a claim, but almost impossible to follow up on it or add any nuance to the process. Therefore, if your oven breaks, they can get a repair person scheduled within 72 hours, and you don't have to speak to anyone - but if your oven breaks 4 times, they keep sending the same repair person to replace the same part and refuse to acknowledge that there's anything wrong...need less friction getting in contact with an actual person.
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
I recently switched internet providers. My previous provider (A) had excellent customer care, I just couldn't afford their prices anymore. I was offered a better price for faster speeds on fiber with another company (B). At first they seemed to have great customer care.
Until I needed help troubleshooting.
Both companies have an app for updates, billing, outages, etc.
Company A would provide notification that there would be techs in the area and that we may lose connection. They also provided an ETA for it to come back up, all through the app. If I called for tech support, they would stay in touch with me and provide a much smaller window for someone to come and assist.
Recently, I lost connection during a meeting. I tried to call Company B for tech support. They stated that they didn't see anything wrong with my connection and couldn't figure it out. They offered to send a technician to check on my lines. I let them know that I work from home and need someone asap. Even if I had to wait until morning. They promised the following morning appointment. I then received an email stating the tech would not be available until 3 days later. I called back to clarify the message and make sure the ticket was not to take that long. I later found out that there were techs at my driveway working on the lines for customers further down the road. No communication at all! They had been there all day. They even told me that they did not have to report to HQ that they had disconnected internet for our neighborhood.
I'm not sure the price outways the customer care anymore.
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
I see examples of both amazing and poor customer experiences living in San Francisco. Real estate is so expensive that it makes it hard for restaurants to stay alive in SF.
One of my favorite restaurants plays records and their pizza is delicious. Every morning, they sell bagels so people can come for breakfast too. It gives customers the opportunity to buy in the morning and at night. Chains like McDonald's and Taco Bell in San Francisco don't do as well because they don't deliver a customer experience on the same level as others. Sure McDonald's is open all day, but they use poor ingredients to sell cheap food. It isn't enough for them to stay in business when there's so much great food/restaurants around them. That's why you only see a couple of these franchise/chain restaurants in SF. The same is true in the software industry!
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
experienced great customer experience with online retailier. Received damaged goods and replied via "contact us" function and they replied within 1 hour offering to send new product expedited no shipping cost incurred and a gift card in an effort to remeddy inconvenience.
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
Hello Everyone,
Amazing Customer Experience:
This organization needed to be updated with its website design and helped with its image to acquire investors for a campaign they were doing. As soon as we revised and launched the new image, we saw investors and new members join the organization. We also fulfilled the initial funding needed to stay afloat.
Poor Customer Experience
When a business sells you a service, and then you receive something else, it becomes stressful and a waste of time. I WAS SHUT DOWN AND IGNORED when I wanted to share and complain about my experience. Since this was in the tourism sector, I went to the minister and then headed to the police department to file the complaint. When a business is not accountable, something shady is occurring, so legal action is advised as long as you can provide proof and a detailed report.
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
Amazing Customer Experience: Recently, I had an amazing customer experience with an online retailer. I had ordered a product, but it was delivered to the wrong address. When I contacted their customer service, they were quick to respond and apologized for the inconvenience. They immediately shipped a new product to me and even offered a discount for my next purchase. Their customer service was friendly, efficient, and went above and beyond to make things right. I was so impressed with their service that I became a loyal customer and recommended them to my friends and family. This type of excellent customer care can lead to increased sales, customer retention, and positive word-of-mouth marketing.
Poor Customer Experience: On the other hand, I had a poor customer experience with a restaurant. I had made a reservation for a special occasion, but when I arrived, they had given away our table to another party. The staff was unapologetic and unhelpful, and we were forced to wait for a long time for another table. The food was also disappointing, and the overall experience left a bad taste in my mouth. I was so disappointed that I never returned to that restaurant and even warned my friends and family to avoid it. This type of poor care can lead to negative reviews, decreased sales, and a damaged reputation.
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
Share a time when you had an amazing customer experience and you saw a company grow faster and faster because of their wonderful customer care.
When I worked at a hotel in Melbourne which went aboec and beyond for all transactions during the business process. It organically grew to be the best hotel in Australia and awarded Forbes 5 star international recognition.
Share a time when you had a poor customer experience (please don’t name names or organizations) and how you saw that type of poor care affect their business.
Word of mouth for this company meant a drastic downturn in business revenue as customers were faced with a great product but very poor execusion of interactions with customers. Rude and unmotivated ownership meant a flow on of poor google reviews.
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
Amazing - I was on a vacation in another city and at a store. They didn't have what I wanted but they took time to find another local business that probably would (and did). The employee of this shop was so nice and helpful that I gave them a positive review online AND recommended them to another tourist I ran into that week.
Not Great - was trying to make an auto-body/service appointment. sat on hold for nearly 10 minutes and then was asked to leave a voicemail. Chose to call back and try again... 10 more minutes of hold and then asked to leave a voicemail so this time I did. 2 days passed and no call from the shop to schedule an appointment. Left a negative review and chose a different shop who answered my call.
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
yea that is really frustrating. I am in a busniess where onliine reviews can make an impact (as are countless others). Question: After you left the review, did the body shop that kept you on hold contact/reach out to you? And has this happened to you in other scenarios (review left [positive or negative] and the reviewed business reached out to you?
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
Was on a team that was trialing AI dialers.
1. Very engaging AE and Customer Success Rep both invested in our ability to see results. Even helped by looking up prospects Direct Lines. Got to know each team member individually.
2. AE wasn't engaging. The whole team couldn't start the trial on the same day. The product was glitchy and didn't have as smooth UX. We were actually more excited about this product and it was significantly more affordable than what we went with.
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
Share a time when you had an amazing customer experience and you saw a company grow faster and faster because of their wonderful customer care.
I used a chatbot Saas product that was remarkably more intuitive to use than the ones I've tried in the past. This led me to share with others in my groups, share use cases, and generated community discussions around the chatbot.
Share a time when you had a poor customer experience (please don’t name names or organizations) and how you saw that type of poor care affect their business.
With a self-serve Saas product, you're bound to encounter issues. I've encountered Saas companies with slow customer support response and poor documentation. I've seen this reflect poorly in their growth and community engagement versus similar products.
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
I worked for a beauty/ body care startup that required all sales representatives to prioritize the customer by greeting them at the entrance, asking probing questions, and being their personalized guide throughout their shopping experience; Providing this experience consistently led to over 20% growth in customer satisfaction ratings and retention within a few months.
I also had experiences where I have heard management arguing with or in front of customers or sales personal ignoring the customer until the customer speaks to them.
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
Force impact when the customers have the interest to the services/products that you offer in order to solve their problems. Force impact should delight the people who are working and the customers are happy to the solutions you presented. Friction impact is the slowing down the system of your business. It means that it doesn’t work with the customers and have a negative impact to them.
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
1)Share a time when you had an amazing customer experience and you saw a company grow faster and faster because of their wonderful customer care.
Sometimes, last year, since I am into sales of Tigernuts milk, a customer ordered for it. There was a curfew around where the customer is based, meanwhile, logistics company I contacted to do the delivery declined to go. As a last resort, I had to go all out myself to do the delivery.
You need to see the amazement and delight om my customer on seeing that I actually did the delivery myself. Aside paying for the juice, he paid for my transportation fare. By so doing I gained my customer's confidence and Trust.
2) Share a time when you had a poor customer experience.
There was a time I had issue with my bank over multiple charges deduction so I contacted my bank's customer service to inquire what the issues are. Aside for the long pickup time, the supposed customer service agent was unprofessional, there were background noises, she also had poor understanding of issues around the bank operations. This friction if not addressed could halt the bank's growth overtime.
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
1. I had an amazing customer experience when working in real estate and I had recieved a call from a parent concerned about the property, and how I handled it was that I suggested a tour of the property to and gave an exclusive 15 minute time period of showing them the model apartment and let them survey the place fully, and it led to a signed lease. I think it was because I provided a lot of information about the property during the tour, and answered all their questions, without hesitation, and provided them company merch as part of being hospitable.
2. There was a time where I was working a customer service call with a streaming service, and I felt that the customer was verbally brutal enough to berate me for a whole 5 minutes without letting me get a word in, and when I was able to provide a solution, example: I'm so sorry that you are experiencing this now, and I understand that you want to return the player, and discontinue your account, but we do have this deal where if you use our player for a month, we provide you a 20 dollar gift card due to player having channels for commercials, and you initially recieved this player for free, and you earn money. Even with discussing this, they still didn't want it, and was really angry and didn't really describe what the actual problem was, so I handled returning the product, and yes it meant losing a long-term client, but it happens.
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
Share a time when you had an amazing customer experience and you saw a company grow faster and faster because of their wonderful customer care.
When purchasing musical equipment from a specific online retailer, the customer agents were so knowledgeable and “non-salesy” that it made the experience pleasant. This same company grew over the years to become the #1 online musical equipment retailer.
Share a time when you had a poor customer experience (please don’t name names or organizations) and how you saw that type of poor care affect their business.
Buying musical equipment from a specific store front big-box company became less of an enjoyable experience because it became apparent that the sales people were not concerned with the customers as musicians but more just as consumers. That company is now on the brink of bankruptcy.
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
Example of force, where I miss a payment to a credit card bank. The next billing period, the bank hits me with a penalty late fee on the balance due. They curb late payments, and cover the cost of slower cash flow.
Example of good friction is making me phone the bank when I seek an adjustment of the late fee, but letting me clear the penalty from using the phone tree menu and not requiring me to actually speak with a bank representative. The bank can confirm my contact profile information, and offer addtional services like card protection or higher credit limit, or a different bill date.
Example of bad friction is making me phone the bank, fight the gated menu on the phone tree, talk to a live agent who can't make the adjustment, request to speak to the agent's supervisor. Uggh.
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
Positive customer experience when my cell phone company was able to remove innacurate charges at the first point of contact, not requiring me to "negotiate" up the chain. The Force was the level of authority granted to the Cx representative.
Negative experience however, was with the same company not being able to actually solve the issue I was having, and requiring me to call in each month to have the charges removed. The friction was not having a clear understanding of who had the knowledge to correct the problem outright or not having the expertise available in real-time to allow consistency of communication.
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
From author Val McDermid today on twitter: Great example of friction
"So, I needed to replace a credit card and opted to apply for @marksandspencer's card. Filled in the forms, then got an email asking me to call them. One question - 'We can see your income and your age; are you thinking of retiring soon?'Am I the only one who finds that insulting?"
When have you seen force or friction impact a company’s ability to grow?
1.I used to respond to customer inquiries on how to utilise the software products in a prior role as a sales representative for a software company. In one case, a mid-sized company purchased the programme, but the staff members of the organisation reported discontent and dissatisfaction with the software. I knew that this client could use the programme, therefore I didn't want to lose them.To help with queries about how to set up and utilise the programme, I organised a training session in response. I was able to address technical inquiries from staff members and show them how the teams might use the programme to work more effectively because of my in-depth product expertise. The client successfully installed the software thanks to the extra time and effort I put in, and the client went on to suggest my services to other companies in its sector. My sales rose by 30% in that quarter as a result of this.
2.Unfortunately, bad customer service is all too typical these days. Recently, I was in a restaurant with a really irritable waitress. She was hurried and it was clear from her behaviour that she didn't want to be there. It's vitally crucial to put those emotions behind you when working in circumstances where the needs of the client come first.