Scott Ashton
Gnitubirtnoc Rebmem
Matt:
I have to agree with Wes, because I believe that you are a good person, but that doesn't automatically mean you run your business well. Others have observed that you have definietly hit a bump in the road and you have acknowledged this and highlighted your mitigation strategy.
In my opinion your achilles heel is that you take your business matters personally - and since its your business I know that it can be hard to quell your emtions, partcularly when you perceive that you are being attacked. This is obvious in your interaction with more than one of your customers and quite frankly I believe that this has more to do with your present predicament than your shipping woes. The bottom line is that customers get pissed - sometimes for good reason - often for no reason. If I said what I wanted to say to the "customers" I deal with at work I would have lost my job a long time ago. The bottom line is that you need some breathing room to make the changes that will improve your shiping situation and going for the throat of your customers is the last thing that will buy you that cushion.
Will I order from you again? Yes, but the caveat is that I will only order stuff I can afford to wait on - which is usually not the big $$$ stuff. I would happily give you all of my business if I knew that I would get it in a timely fashion.
One word about email - it is unreliable! Anyone using a SPAM filter that subscribes to blacklists will find they are bouncing a pretty significant amount of mail from the likes of Comacst, AOL, Hotmail, etc. because at any given point a significant number of each of these services' mail servers are on the blacklist for sending SPAM. My suggestion (for what its worth) - offer an order status page that cutomers can login to and check the status of their orders and send inquiries through.
-Scott Ashton
I have to agree with Wes, because I believe that you are a good person, but that doesn't automatically mean you run your business well. Others have observed that you have definietly hit a bump in the road and you have acknowledged this and highlighted your mitigation strategy.
In my opinion your achilles heel is that you take your business matters personally - and since its your business I know that it can be hard to quell your emtions, partcularly when you perceive that you are being attacked. This is obvious in your interaction with more than one of your customers and quite frankly I believe that this has more to do with your present predicament than your shipping woes. The bottom line is that customers get pissed - sometimes for good reason - often for no reason. If I said what I wanted to say to the "customers" I deal with at work I would have lost my job a long time ago. The bottom line is that you need some breathing room to make the changes that will improve your shiping situation and going for the throat of your customers is the last thing that will buy you that cushion.
Will I order from you again? Yes, but the caveat is that I will only order stuff I can afford to wait on - which is usually not the big $$$ stuff. I would happily give you all of my business if I knew that I would get it in a timely fashion.
One word about email - it is unreliable! Anyone using a SPAM filter that subscribes to blacklists will find they are bouncing a pretty significant amount of mail from the likes of Comacst, AOL, Hotmail, etc. because at any given point a significant number of each of these services' mail servers are on the blacklist for sending SPAM. My suggestion (for what its worth) - offer an order status page that cutomers can login to and check the status of their orders and send inquiries through.
-Scott Ashton