Riviot
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By the way being Karen is to put that office upside down, not to ask for a manager in charge.
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By the way being Karen is to put that office upside down, not to ask for a manager in charge.
Well is not the case here. No violence of any kind. Not verbal, no physical, no karen storming the place.... never.Because the comment that approach shouldn't matter was rather... absolute. It definitely should. I used an extreme example to make a point.
Last time I called, they promise to escalate, then suddenly my guide email me back saying that she spoke with the service center and there is nothing wrong with the truck and there is nothing else to do. (that was before the truck broke on the middle of the road)I may have missed this but have you tried calling Rivian and talking to a few people there and if need be escalating there?
I tried to not write an extensive post and cut to the chase, but here is...... Before asking for the manager, we greet, we chat about what happened with my truck, he went to call my service tech rep and we keep talking and I asked for meet the manager as a way to find a solution to the truck problem... More heads, more experience years, more everything always help....Here's the thing, asking for a manger in the way you did is kind of arrogant. I don't know if you intended to ask in that way, or if you even realize the way it comes across but to many public facing professionals the phrase "Let me speak to your manager" are seared into their brains and provide a visceral reaction almost immediately.
I wasn't there and I have no way of judging your tone or body language or the general tone of the conversation. All I have to go by is your word and the reaction of Rivian. Based on those two things it doesn't seem like you were fully aware of the "let me talk to you manager" phrase and the negative connotation contained within that phrase. So maybe even if you weren't intending to be abrasive you came across that way anyways.
I think that explains the disconnect here, and now that you know going forward I suggest you make a concerted effort to soften your message a little bit. People aren't going to take you any less seriously if you come at it a little less harshly, it isn't all or nothing in conversation and often times calmer tones and better phrasing send a stronger message than the harsh demands right from the beginning.
Or that's not it at all and the Rivian people were just being dicks. That's possible too, but from my personal dealings with Rivian service the people have been pretty friendly and accommodating and willing to go out of their way for their customers. So who knows, all you can really do is move forward and maybe for your own sake think hard about your part in this interaction to see if there was any place you could do better next time. If not, good on you but after over a decade in upper management I'm still learning better ways to deal with people.
You are totally right and is a good advice, I will have it present for future customer service interactions.Someone comes in and asks to speak to a manager and the correct response is generally should be along the lines of, “each SC has several managers responsible for different departments. So that I can sync you up with the correct manager, please tell me a little bIt about the issue you’re experiencing….”
this simple statement is an excellent way to let the customer know you understand they have an problem/issue/concern and want to partner with them to help get it resolved.
This is generally not the fault of the person at the SC you’re talking to, but penny pinchers at corporate. So the next time you’re in there try flipping it around and let the employee know you’ve been having an issue and then ask that employee if they can help you. I think you’ll find most people want to help, and you can set that person up to be your ally & guide through the issue. The customer who comes at the staff with respect will always get more assistance than the Chad/Karen who thinks they deserve it just for being an early adopter and walking through the door.
…but then what do I know, I’ve only been in the customer service and sales training field for 20+ years.
Exactly that, to show the pictures and to ask him to put more resources on finding if that is that is the root cause of the suspension issue.just to be clear, you were there to show them the brake sensor connector issue you discovered? or is there an ongoing issue with your vehicle that I missed?
Most of the successful people I've known are the ones who do more listening than talking.It's that old retail axiom...."All of our customers bring us joy, some when they come in and some when they leave."