Supplier Review of the Year 2006
So, it’s been a busy year all round – surprise surprise. Here are my thoughts on how my suppliers have performed over the period.
Separately, i’ve noted a phenomenon that I suspect is common to many of us who use The Internet extensively to source goods, services and knowledge. It relates to the number of supplier I have transacted with; in short the number has gone through the roof – 266 suppliers where I have had one or more transactions that have been recorded by bank or credit card. More details of the review work i’ve been doing on this when I get back to work next week.
My Ten Best Suppliers of 2006
1) Like last year, i’d have Ten UK as my overall most valued supplier. Not quite as good as last year though, the travel service has been outsourced to Wexas and that occassionally does not work as well as the in-house variant.
2) Ocado – at last a grocery delivery service that delivers what you asked for, when you asked for it, does not cry buckets over delivering to the fourth floor of a block, and does not take the opportunity to dump a load of almost outdated stuff on their customers.
3, 4, 5) Seems to be a bit of a theme developing, in that i’ve grouped three suppliers who just do what they are supposed to do, do it consistently well, and don’t waste my time with stacks of marketing messages.
- Flickr, online photos
- Demon, broadband
- Canon, digital camera
6) Starbucks – as last year, they just do what they are good at – although they I did make the mistake of signing up on their web site so get bombarded.
7) LoveFilm – previously ScreenSelect, online DVD rental – the basic service is good, the takeover seems to have gone very smoothly and i’ve yet to have any problems with them.
British Airways – as before, no ground-breaking stuff, just good service and a web site that allows me to do what I want to do quickly, without getting ripped off.
9) Apple – if only because my laptop is now almost 3 years old and has yet to have any problems.
10) Sky – great products, especially the Sky Plus box; let down only by keeping me waiting on the line for 30 mins to re-arrange an installation appointment.
So – all in all, nothing radical happening this year on the positive supplier experiences…..but there must be something in the fact that all a supplier has to do to be seen as performing well is to do what they say they will do in the first place – preferably whilst toning down the frequency of the marketing messages.
And now to the bad experiences.
My Ten Worst Suppliers of 2006
1) Easily holding their top position – Mapfre Insurance Company in Spain. Their deliberate obstructiveness has meant that I have now just given up on the £4k that they owe me – the thought of going through a compliant to the regulator in Spain is just to much hassle. So – they are forever on my black-list (along with Sony), will never see any money from me ever again under any circumstances, and I will take every chance I can to dissuade other people from using them.
2) BT – they may be suffering in their high ranking from the 90 mins I spent on the phone to them yesterday just trying to make my broadband charge appear on my phone, but overall they remain an incredibly silo-ed organisation. I know from behind the scenes discussions that they do actually try to provide a joined up experience for customers……but they have a LONG way to go.
3) Thames Water – Water pressure in central London where we live is deliberately being reduced; so sometimes our pressure drops to a trickle. Apparently they only guarantee water pressure to the front door of a block of flats, not to the individual flats; a bit bizarre given that it is the individual flat that pays the bill. This will probably mean that our block needs to invest in a load of booster pumps – meanwhile, Thames Water mke vast profits and continue to let millions of gallons leak from pipes in London.
…to carry on the utility theme….
4) British Gas – excessive price rises; quick to go up when raw material gas prices go up, and slow to go down when they fall. Plus – crap billing system that sees me being £250 in credit as the standing orders they take are too high. Better that they get the interest on the overcharge than their customers….
5) Iomega – why produce external hard drives as external back ups that regularly fail and have to be returned?
6) Royal Mail – my delivery at home has gone from 8am to 11.30am; i’m not happy about that but I can see why they cannot sustain the earlier one without a big proce rise. My compliant is more around the new pricing policy for bigger mailed items – I have no idea how they rules work, so end up putting on more money than needs be, as i’m sure many others do.
….and now to a mini-banking theme….
7) Barclays – I opened a small business bank account with them in May, and it was shut by October. Incompetence, over-selling, complete lack of interest in knowing their customer other than what could be sold to them.
Unfortunately (as many of my peers have told me), none of the big banks are any good at all in the S of the SME sector.
HSBC – just how long can it take to establish an online merchant services account when they is no credit risk and more than enough money in the account to cover the level of processing. Perhaps having managers who openly express their lack of understanding of The Internet is not a good start point.
9) British Airport Authority – who run Heathrow Airport and the Heathrow Express….enough said.
10) Myserverworld – have gone from saints to sinners over the years through not keeping up with junk mail filtering technology. Their lack of investment means I need to waste more time; i’d rather pay more for the service.
Could do better:
1) Glasgow Rangers – such high hopes for the season, disappearing through some pretty pitiful signings. David Murray might get a bit of a shock come season ticket renewal time – every year till now he could rely on the ones giving thier tickets up to be replaced from the waiting list; this year I suspect that won’t be an option.