Hi Everyone
I wonder about the objectivity of Hello Peter. I counted the first 400 Telkom records in HelloPeter and only 13.25% of them were positive, yet Hello Peter lists Telkom as having the most compliments. Is this simply because Telkom has the most more records than any other company?
THE INCIDENT
Am I miss reading your website? If not, I question the objectivity of your service when everyone in South Africa knows that Telkom has the worst customer service of them all, yet you list them as receiving the most compliments.
The usability of your website needs improvement. Its difficult to find statistics on which companies actually resolve their customer complaints, etc.
SUPPLIER'S RESPONSE
Time: 08:13:06
Thu 15 Feb 07
Hello
Telkom is listed on the most compliments - well, because they have!! See below the chart - last 10 days.
Prblem with customer service is that it's subjective - what may be great service to me might be shocking service to you. While you may think that Telkom provides bad service, there are countless Compliments from Users on this site who disagree. Who am I to argue?
Same goes for problem resolution. There are some customers who believe that the only way to fix a problem with a car bought two years ago and since driven over the Drakensburg is to replace the car with a new one. Other customers simply want the problem fixed.
Because the customer wants a brand new car and doesn't get one, is the company at fault?
We provide a portal for communication between buyer and seller. We do not profess to be an offshoot of Stats SA. But, go to Co's Who Respond > pick one > check their responses.... it's all there. Regards - Peter
To Hello Peter
I'd just like to respond to the earlier Telkom comment.
How can you claim to be objective when you receive big fat checks from the very companies that customers complain about? It is analogous to a search engine that alters search engine rankings based on the amount of money they receive from a company. Essentially, your business model encourages you to observe bias against the very consumers your service is supposed to serve.
I wonder about the objectivity of Hello Peter. I counted the first 400 Telkom records in HelloPeter and only 13.25% of them were positive, yet Hello Peter lists Telkom as having the most compliments. Is this simply because Telkom has the most more records than any other company?
THE INCIDENT
Am I miss reading your website? If not, I question the objectivity of your service when everyone in South Africa knows that Telkom has the worst customer service of them all, yet you list them as receiving the most compliments.
The usability of your website needs improvement. Its difficult to find statistics on which companies actually resolve their customer complaints, etc.
SUPPLIER'S RESPONSE
Time: 08:13:06
Thu 15 Feb 07
Hello
Telkom is listed on the most compliments - well, because they have!! See below the chart - last 10 days.
Prblem with customer service is that it's subjective - what may be great service to me might be shocking service to you. While you may think that Telkom provides bad service, there are countless Compliments from Users on this site who disagree. Who am I to argue?
Same goes for problem resolution. There are some customers who believe that the only way to fix a problem with a car bought two years ago and since driven over the Drakensburg is to replace the car with a new one. Other customers simply want the problem fixed.
Because the customer wants a brand new car and doesn't get one, is the company at fault?
We provide a portal for communication between buyer and seller. We do not profess to be an offshoot of Stats SA. But, go to Co's Who Respond > pick one > check their responses.... it's all there. Regards - Peter
To Hello Peter
I'd just like to respond to the earlier Telkom comment.
How can you claim to be objective when you receive big fat checks from the very companies that customers complain about? It is analogous to a search engine that alters search engine rankings based on the amount of money they receive from a company. Essentially, your business model encourages you to observe bias against the very consumers your service is supposed to serve.
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