Service that is the "norm" isn't good enough now

I recently bought a new set of tires from Tirerack.com.   I wanted a specific kind that got good ratings.   They were delivered to my house.  

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I had to find a place to get the tires mounted.  I called the local Les Schwab.   It was close by, and they pride themselves on service in their ads.  I called them, and they quoted me a price, but i couldn't make an appointment.   So the next day I took the car in mid-day figuring it would be a 30 minute install.  

They told me they were busy that day and could I leave my car with them for the day.  I couldn't.  They, in turn, recommended I come back first thing the next day.  

Next day, same thing.  A 3 hour wait.

Now, they were very friendly.  But being friendly isn't good enough now.  We are seeing a change in how service is conducted.   "Good" isn't good enough now.  

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Why can't a make an appointment?   Why can't I make an appointment online?   I should have an exact appointment where they meet me in the service drive.   If you can't do a good job of being exact about timing, why don't you provide a car service so I don't have to sit in your waiting room for 3 hours?   

Services has to get "Great" for it to break through the norm.   Look at Uber.   Uber is a new "taxi" service.   You use an app to request the towncar.   App shows you how long it will be until it gets to you.   The cars are clean and nice.  They often offer you bottled water.   When you arrive at your destination, you don't have to fumble with cash or a credit card.  They charge you direct to your card straight from the app.   Tip is included.   It makes taking a "taxi" ride so much better.   The experience of it blows every other service out of the water.   

Again, they focus on the consumer experience here.   Something that Les Schwab doesn't do more than the "norm".  The "norm" isn't enough now.  You need to be excellent.   

As an aside: I got the tires put on at my normal dealership.  They did it for a price 40% less than Les Schwab.  In 30 minutes.  

Smart Lesson = we crave human contact

There is a good article on LinkedIn today on the personalization of content for consumers.   I've begun to think a lot in the last week about personalization of advertising.  Right now the "algorithms" just do mass "personalization" of big segments of consumers.  

Is this enough?  It seems like consumers crave more than this.   They want more than their cookie trails following them around and having a message from a company that is only lightly modified for them.   What if the company could use this vast amount of information about consumers to actually give better service to a consumer.    What if we could not use big segments to modify experiences, but what if we could modify an experience for an individual to really know what they were looking for?  

I think we are moving into an age where we have personalized experiences for shopping.  And that these personalized experiences will move into advertising.   

I’m a proponent of the concept that companies need to replace dumb touchpoints with smart ones
— Bruce Kasanoff
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