Satisfaction With the Wireless Retail Sales Experience Declines Considerably When Customers Are ...
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Satisfaction With the Wireless Retail Sales Experience Declines Considerably When Customers Are Not Greeted Within 30 Seconds of Entering the Store
T-Mobile Ranks Highest in Wireless Retail Sales Satisfaction for a Fifth Consecutive Time
While the average wait time before customers are greeted after they first enter a wireless retail store is approximately five minutes, overall satisfaction declines considerably if the wait time exceeds 30 seconds, according to the J.D. Power and Associates 2007 Wireless Retail Sales Satisfaction Study(SM) - Volume 1.
The semi-annual study analyzes evaluations from customers who recently had a wireless retail sales purchase experience. Overall customer satisfaction with major wireless carrier-branded stores is based on four factors. In order of importance, they are: sales staff (51%); store display (17%); store facility (16%); and price/promotion (16%).
The study finds that customers who are approached within 30 seconds of entering the store provide a satisfaction score that is 86 points higher (an average of 774 on a 1,000-point scale) than customers who are not greeted as quickly (688 points). Currently, only 39 percent of wireless customers report being greeted within 30 seconds of entering a retail wireless store. Customers who are not greeted in a timely manner are also 32 percent less likely to visit that store again compared with customers who are approached within 30 seconds.
The time spent waiting to speak with a qualified salesperson is also critical, as overall satisfaction declines considerably when the wait time exceeds one minute. Currently, only 28 percent of customers report speaking with a qualified sales representative within one minute of entering a retail store.
"With fewer new wireless customers entering the market, the wireless industry is becoming fiercely competitive for retailers," said Kirk Parsons, senior director of wireless services at J.D. Power and Associates. "Wireless carrier retail stores face strong competition from national electronic retail outlets such as Best Buy, Circuit City and Radio Shack, which tend to perform better in initially greeting customers in a timely manner. It's imperative that wireless carriers concentrate on setting the proper expectations and provide their customers with a timely and efficient sales transaction."
Additionally, as the amount of time spent during the wireless retail sales transaction increases, customer satisfaction declines. The average wireless retail sales transaction takes nearly one hour to complete from the time the customer enters the store to the time when final paperwork is finished and the product is received.
T-Mobile ranks highest in customer satisfaction for a fifth consecutive reporting period (tying in 2005) among major wireless carrier-owned retail stores. T-Mobile receives particularly high ratings in sales staff, store display and price/promotion. Verizon Wireless follows T-Mobile in the rankings.
The study also finds the following key retail wireless sales transaction patterns:
* Among customers who visited a retail store in the past six months,
almost one-half (46%) did so to renew or change an existing wireless
plan. An additional 16 percent visited the retail store as a first-time
wireless customer.
* Retail satisfaction declines by 104 points among customers who report
they were pressured during the sales process. The average overall
satisfaction rating among customers who report experiencing no sales
pressure is 739 index points, compared with 635 index points among
those who say they were pressured.
Volume 1 of the 2007 Wireless Retail Sales Satisfaction Study is based on experiences reported by 7,276 wireless users who completed a retail sales transaction within six months prior to being surveyed. The results are from the two most recent reporting waves, which were conducted in September 2006 and January 2007. Visit JDPower.com to view customer satisfaction ratings for wireless service and carrier performance, call quality, customer care, retail sales and mobile phone handsets.
Overall Retail Sales Index Rankings (Based on a 1,000-point scale) T-Mobile 737 Verizon Wireless 726 Industry Average 716 Alltel 714 AT&T 708 Sprint Nextel 680
Web site: http://www.jdpower.com/corporate
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