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The Gap: Poor data creates CRM snafu

By | July 7, 2010, 3:36am PDT

Summary: Online service problems at The Gap highlight the connection between back-end IT systems and customer satisfaction.

Incorrect customer transaction data and information sharing limitations between online and local stores at clothing retailer, the Gap, creates serious problems for some buyers. This case demonstrates the important connection between IT systems and customer satisfaction.

The details are clear because this story happened to me when I shopped at The Gap’s online store. Here is the company’s simple return policy, as stated on its website:

You can return or exchange items by mail or at the appropriate brand’s store (U.S. locations only) within 45 days of your order date.

However, buying online and trying to return items at a local store became a difficult and lengthy ordeal due to multiple data problems.

Online data issues

The order process itself had problems:

  • After online checkout before final payment, the system removed an item from my shopping cart saying it was no longer available.
  • Following payment, The Gap sent an email saying an item I bought was no longer available and would not be shipped.
  • The shipping receipt indicated The Gap would send the reported out of stock item separately; no such order segment ever arrived.

Brick and mortar data issues

Trying to return the items revealed additional system failures:

  • The retail store could not locate my purchase in the transaction history to which it has access. According to the Gap employees, stores have only limited access to online records.
  • The local store then called the company’s online services organization, which also had no record of my purchase.
  • The store manager finally bypassed the online order system to process the return independently from my specific account.

THE PROJECT FAILURES ANALYSIS

Creating a seamless online shopping experience requires accurate inventory data, purchase history, and so on. The data challenge grows when company such as The Gap integrates online services with local retail stores.

According to anonymous Gap employees with whom I spoke, the company often faces difficulty resolving problems that arise when customers order online and seek service in a local store. The Gap did not respond to my official request for comment; here is the email I sent the company’s public relations department:

I am writing a story for ZDNet, a unit of CBS news, about service problems when some customers place orders online and attempt to return the merchandise to local stores.

Inconsistencies and discrepancies on customer order data sometimes leads to problems returning items in the stores. Clearly, the GAP has system-related issues in this area.

My questions:

1. Is Gap aware of these issues?
2. How widespread is the problem?
3. Has Gap taken steps to correct the underlying system issues?

Note to The Gap: Ignoring this problem creates the impression that your company just doesn’t care about customer service. Can we draw any other conclusion from your lack of response?

The Gap is hardly alone among retailers facing such problems. I have blogged about system problems at retailers such as Levi Strauss, and Overstock.com. Another merchant, J.Crew, reported poor financial results after rolling out a customer relationship upgrade without sufficient testing.

My take. In a data-driven world, successful customer relationships require accurate and timely data.

The systems that collect, manage, and distribute this data to customers and internal employees are sufficiently complex to make IT success a strategic and competitive advantage for organizations that do it well. Conversely, by creating hassle for customers, IT failure can erode confidence and reduce buyers’ willingness to engage and shop.

Back-end IT and customer interactions systems can have a profound impact on overall customer satisfaction and brand image.

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Michael Krigsman is a recognized authority on the causes and prevention of IT failures.

Disclosure

Michael Krigsman

Michael Krigsman writes and speaks about technology in a manner that most observers consider to be fair and balanced. Michael believes that writing about IT failures, which often have complex causes, creates a unique obligation to be reasonable and accurate in both reporting and analysis.

Michael maintains active personal and professional relationships with enterprise technology buyers, vendors, analyst firms (or individual analysts), consultants, and system integrators. As CEO of Asuret, Michael sells and delivers paid services to members of these same groups.

Vendors regularly reimburse Michael's out-of-pocket travel expenses to attend industry conferences and events. Conference organizers frequently waive entry fees when Michael attends industry events. Michael often speaks at industry conferences and events.

He is a member of the Enterprise Irregulars, a loose association of consultants, investors, industry representatives, analysts, and users of enterprise software.

For daily updates on Michael's activities, follow him on Twitter.

Biography

Michael Krigsman

Michael Krigsman is CEO of Asuret, Inc., a consulting company dedicated to reducing technology implementation failures. Asuret's suite of software tools improve the success rate of enterprise software deployments by quantifying and measuring governance issues that cause most project failures. Michael led the research effort underlying Asuret's model of collective intelligence and its practical application to reducing IT failures in consulting environments. He is a recognized authority on the causes and prevention of IT failures and is frequently quoted in the press on IT project and related CIO issues. He is considered an enterprise software industry "influencer" and provides advice to technology buyers, vendors, and services firms.

Previously, Michael served as CEO of Cambridge Publications, which develops tools and processes for software implementations and related business practice automation projects. Michael has been involved with hundreds of software development projects, for companies ranging from small startups to Fortune 500 organizations. Michael graduated with an M.B.A. from Boston University and a B.A. from Bard College. He is a Board member of the America's Cup Hall of Fame and the Herreshoff Marine Museum in Bristol, RI.

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Customer service is on a steady decline everywhere it seems
klumper 9th Jul 2010
Compared to just a generation back, it could be argued it is approaching a state of free fall. Examples of this deterioration are boundless now.

Quantity over quality reigns supreme in this increasingly no deposit, no return world.
0 Votes
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I had a similar problem at Staples. After submitting a printing order online through the website (which also allowed me to choose a pick-up time, which I did) I arrived at the store only to find that they'd never received my order from the website, and had no record of it. I ended up making an emergency run to Fedex/Kinko's to get my handouts printed, which were for a business meeting the next morning. I assume the problem was on Staples' back-end, although I don't know for sure that it wasn't an issue with the store's employees in the copy center.
Happened to my wife - she got an automated refund for train tickets she picked up at the station office instead of the the ticket machine.
Somehow no connection was made that the tickets were picked up in a different way. She refused the refund and notified the company - but this can seriously cost money.

Thod
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RE: The Gap: Poor data creates CRM snafu
mike.reys@... 8th Jul 2010
Data is (an important) part of the issue here, but it's never about the data alone. It's also about the processes.
Although the business had thought through how to return items, there's a Business-IT gap (pun not intended) which caused the necessary data not to be available in the stores for example.
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Same type issues with Fry's Electronics.
You order on line and can't take it back to brick and mortar for refund.

In store pickup requires you go on line and order to get special pricing even though you are in store.
Compared to just a generation back, it could be argued it is approaching a state of free fall. Examples of this deterioration are boundless now.

Quantity over quality reigns supreme in this increasingly no deposit, no return world.

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