Can Sprint reinvent itself and reverse the loss of their customers? It would seem millions are flocking to other carriers and Sprint is challenged to stem the tide. Business Week writes about Sprint Nextel’s Last-Ditch Weapon- a new phone, plan and corporate image. Which may be a bit melodramatic, but it paints a challenging picture for a once high-flying cell phone company.
Is Business Week right and is Sprint really on the ropes? Their CEO Dan Hesse is making the case that Sprint finally ”gets it” and will give subscribers what they want:
“People want the whole package,” Hesse said during a keynote address at an annual conference held by CTIA-The Wireless Association. “They’re saying, who’s going to give me what I want, when I want, and make it easy to use. They’re all the building blocks of the wireless company of the future.”Â

 Sprint now offers an all-in-one plan for $99 that gives you as many minutes, internet, picture and video stuff that you could ever want.  They’ve got a new phone line-up and soon will offer the Instinct, a sheik touch-screen cell phone that has the iphone look to it and all the bells and whistles.
But the biggest problem for Sprint is their customer base, and former customers. This was the cell-phone company whose customer service execs must have gone to the Trump School of Business… last year they told some customers You’re Fired! presumably because they called customer service too much.
 You know what? Every time a customer calls for help or assistance, that’s the time to sell the company (and your products) once again. In fact, you have to do that. If you don’t- they’re going to leave. In Sprint’s case, they’ve been leaving by the millions.   What did You’re Fired! say to all the other Sprint customers? It told them “Don’t call us because we don’t want to hear it… look what we did to the other guys.”
Realistically that wasn’t really the problem. The greater problem in the past was Sprint’s customer service was simply not up-to-par compared to other companies. It was difficult to get a rep on the phone, and they often didn’t know how to help.
Yet personally I think they’re getting a bad rap these days. I’ve been a Sprint customer for over 5 years, and have been very pleased with the phones, coverage and even customer service. They even have the best cell tower coverage in the area where we live. I love the phone and plan I have. But I’m wary based on other people’s experiences. And as much as I might consider a new phone, I dread going in and haggling with the customer service rep because the plans were historically so complicated and expensive. It shouldn’t be that way, and maybe now Sprint “gets it” enough that I’ll choose a new phone and plan.
But I started wondering: How many companies realize that a bad customer service experience can lose a customer- not only for the short term, but sometimes for life?! It’s true… make the experience bad enough, or hard enough, and they’ll never come back. Â
My own example: Do you know why I’ll never have a Discover card? Because when I was younger they sent me this wonderful invitation to get a credit card with them. I had used credit very little in the past, and was careful with my money and credit history. So I called to apply because it sounded good. I was a college graduate with steady employment with a government agency and that would have been my first credit card.  Then the customer service rep gave me such a hard time over my lack of credit experience, and then denied my application, that it was humiliating.   I hung up, applied with American Express and received a card the next week. I’ve appreciated the Amex customer service ever since. That was two decades ago.  I tear up invitations from Discover almost weekly now. From what I’ve read, people are not that happy with Discover card these days either.
A corporate reputation takes a long time to build, but like any reputation, it can be destroyed in very short order.  I recently read where Sprint lost an enormous business contract because a rep at the store didn’t give the time of day to an innocent request to fix or replace a phone. A phone that had insurance on it, you know- the monthly $4 fee? The individual was accused of dropping the phone in the water and they refused the request. Good grief… the last thing you need when you need help is for the company you pay to give you a hard time.  That individual had been a subscriber for over 10 years, and left the same day. All because of one clueless service rep.
It’s like the police officer I was talking with the other day (professionally!). He said he hardly ever wrote tickets, but when he did- those folks were asking to receive a ticket because they just made things worse for themselves, argued, and gave him a hard time. Sprint is finding out that poor customer service is like asking your customers to leave.Â
Now Sprint is asking customers to come back, or give them another shot. Given enough time and quality service, they may have enough credibility to rebuild the company. I’ll stick with them for now based on my overall positive experience, and to their credit they offer a lot more choice and flexibility these days. They’ve even made contracts simpler and you can try out a plan risk-free for 30 days.  My instincts are telling me to take another look… and when the new Instinct comes out I may do just that.
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