In 2013, TOMS made a terrible mistake: We
outsourced Customer Service.
Like the Portland Trailblazers selecting Sam Bowie in the 1984 NBA
draft, TOMS’ outsourcing decision might have turned out well. Lest we
forget, Bowie was a tantalizing prospect at the University of Kentucky —
but he also had the bone density of aluminum foil … and was drafted one spot
ahead of a guy named Michael Jordan.
Turns out, in the shoe business — as in professional basketball — the best
laid plans don’t always work out.
In the sections that follow, I describe why TOMS outsourced Customer
Service; how the mistake could have been avoided; and more broadly, why
“remarkable” brands apply tender loving care to every customer
interaction. If you’re building a purpose-driven business — and considering
a major “cost-cutting” decision — please learn from TOMS’ mistakes. The
“soul” of your brand may be at stake!
Background
Fueled by the AT&T
commercial, TOMS experienced
hyper-growth from 2009 to 2012. During that period, we:
-
hired 200+ employees
-
became the #1 best-selling shoe brand at Nordstrom (by units sold)
-
received 14,000 applications for a Summer Internship program with 20
positions
-
upgraded from a rickety Santa Monica warehouse to the company’s first
“professional” office (Hello, working printers!).
While TOMS was extremely good at selling shoes, we frequently experienced
hiccups with the less sexy aspects of the business — particularly Supply Chain and Customer Service.
Heading into the 2012 holiday season, the Customer Service Department’s KPIs
were dangerously concerning*.* On average, returns and exchanges took 15+
days to be processed. During peak calling periods, customers frequently
waited 20+ minutes to speak with an agent. The department’s challenges —
initially glossed over by TOMS Leadership Team — soon became the company’s
most urgent problem.
The problem
A myriad of factors combined to create TOMS Customer Service’s struggles:
Technology: In 2013, TOMS.com utilized the e-commerce platform
Magento. Unlike the plug- and-play solutions now
available, Magento circa 2013 was woefully inadequate for a business scaling
as quickly as TOMS. Because of Magento’s limitations:
-
Customer Service Agents (CSAs) required specialized training to learn a
complex and non- intuitive system
-
CSAs manually processed EVERY return and exchange
-
Managers lacked automated tools to track CSA performance (ex: What
percentage of returns and exchanges did John process correctly?)
TOMS’ e-comm department was actively working on replacing Magento; but given
the project’s immense complexity, the new platform wouldn’t be ready for
9-12 months.
Manpower: At the most basic level, the CS Department needed more people
answering phones, responding to emails, and processing returns and
exchanges. If staffed properly, the department could have made the best of
Magento — albeit, in an inefficient/costly manner. By conservative
estimates, the department needed to expand from 20 FTEs to 50+ people.
Second-class citizens: Because of how backlogged Customer Service was,
TOMS’ Leadership Team made the cringeworthy decision to exclude CSAs from
the company’s beloved, camp- themed “All Staff” retreat. While other
employees partied at Camp
TOMS,
CSAs were stuck at TOMS HQ processing returns and exchanges.
For already overworked and stressed-out employees, missing Camp TOMS created
deep resentment. CSAs worked in the same building as TOMS’ salaried
employees — but felt isolated and mistreated, relative to other departments.
Morale: Due to overwork and the intensity of the job, several CSAs began
experiencing stress- related medical conditions. Once-passionate employees
became disgruntled and burned-out; and in many cases, left the business to
pursue other opportunities. The situation was unequivocally bad for
employees, customers and the company’s financial bottom line.
Our solution
After evaluating multiple options (ex: staffing-up full-time employees;
hiring an influx of part- timers; opening a dedicated call center in Las
Vegas), TOMS’ Leadership Team decided to fully outsource Customer Service
to a 3rd-party vendor.
Like a scene from Up in the Air
— minus the charisma or handsomeness of George Clooney — TOMS’ HR Department unceremoniously fired the majority of CSAs, re-assigned
a handful of employees to other departments, and retained one CS Manager to
assist the outsourced vendor.
Outsourced agents in New Mexico and Florida now handled the entirety
of TOMS Customer Service. The new representatives weren’t TOMS employees,
didn’t participate in “All Staff” events, and would never experience
international Giving Trips.
For TOMS’ Leadership Team, the “Customer Service problem” was fully
out-of-sight, out-of-mind.
Ramifications
After a few initial hiccups, the outsourced partner solved TOMS’ immediate
Customer Service needs: Agents responded to emails and phone calls in a
timely manner. All backlogged returns and exchanges were processed. The
department expanded its hours of operation, and began offering support in
Spanish. Muy bien!
In the longer term, however, outsourcing Customer Service created deep
collateral damage that continues to haunt TOMS’ business/culture:
-
Employee morale: When a business talks of being a “family,” but lays off
an entire department with calculated precision, employee morale tends to
precariously decline. Put another way: If your once-beloved employer was
suddenly more concerned with profits than people, how loyal would you be?
-
Social proof: Consider a cynical customer asking the question, “Does
TOMS really give shoes to children in need? Given an FAQ sheet, any outsourced agent can regurgitate the correct answer
(“YES. With every pair of shoes you buy, TOMS gives a pair to a child in
need*.”)
Now, imagine an alternative scenario, where the CSA just returned from a
life-changing Giving Trip. What could have been a short response instead
becomes an engaging conversation — with the CSA enthusiastically sharing
his/her favorite Giving Trip memories. By conventional metrics, long customer
service calls are “inefficient” — but is there any doubt which interaction is
more “remarkable” and/or likely to increase brand loyalty?
Movement vs. Business
At its best, TOMS is a movement that turns customers into fans and
evangelists. At its worst, TOMS is a business that offers deals,
discounts and promotions to sell shoes.
Businesses prioritize revenue growth over everything else. Movements stand
for something that matters, and actively recruit believers to join their
cause.
Revenue-obsessed businesses worry about losing customers to copycat
competitors. Movements grow because of the dedicated action of obsessed
followers.
With that in mind: Does outsourcing Customer Service feel like the
thoughtful action of a people-focused Movement? Or the cost-cutting decision
of a transactional Business?
Revisionist history
With the benefit of hindsight, I would have solved TOMS’ Customer Service
problem in the following manner:
In-house employees: No outsourcing companies — either domestic or
international — would be utilized. Instead, the CS Department would be
comprised entirely of full- and part-time TOMS employees. During the holiday
season, Customer Service would ramp up with additional part-timers.
All full-time CSAs would attend a Giving Trip after their 1st year of
employment; part-time CSAs would attend a Giving Trip after their 2nd work
anniversary.
The Customer Service Department would remain a “farm system” for the rest of
the company. The most hardworking + passionate + knowledgeable CSAs would be
handpicked for promotions within the business.
Technology: In the short term, extra manpower would compensate for
Magento’s limitations. In the longer term, the e-comm department (working
closely with Customer Service) would continue the arduous process of
re-platforming.
Dedicated home: In 2012, TOMS moved from our “rustically charming” Santa
Monica warehouse to a new office in Playa Vista (10 minutes away). In
retrospect, I would have retained the warehouse lease, converted the space
into a dedicated Customer Service Center and transitioned all other
departments to Playa Vista.
With two offices in close proximity, we could have:
-
maintained a unique, work-hard/play-hard culture across the entire company
-
continued regular communication between TOMS’ Leadership Team and CSAs
-
eliminated friction between CSAs and the company’s salaried employees.
In The World Is Flat (2005), Thomas Friedman presciently describes an increasingly digital
world where developing countries compete for skilled jobs like never before.
“It’s certainly difficult for individuals to think about ‘their’ work going
away, being done thousands of miles away by someone earning thousands of
dollars less per year,” Friedman cautions. But in a competitive marketplace
constantly searching for faster/cheaper, “every person, just as every
corporation, must tend to his or her own economic destiny.”
With no offense to Friedman (or Flat Earth
enthusiasts),
I’ll leave you with this:
If you’re building a faceless corporation that sells inexpensive widgets —
by all means, optimize for bottom-line profitability. But if your goal is
turning customers into fans and evangelists, the most meaningful “drivers”
of your business may not be quantifiable.
Every customer interaction is a precious opportunity to grow your tribe.
Saving pennies today may destroy your purpose-driven business. Movements
cannot be outsourced!
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Jake Strom, former Head of Impact Investing at TOMS, is an investor in companies combining Profit + Purpose. His obsession is finding the most incredible entrepreneurs, and helping scale world-changing businesses.
Published Dec 12, 2019 1pm EST / 10am PST / 6pm GMT / 7pm CET