Want to Improve Your Company? Listen to Your Bills

Senior Vice President, Operations, IntraLinks
POSTED ON December 8, 2009

David SumkaThe thing most people don’t know about billing issues is that they rarely have anything to do with billing. Of course, customers review, analyze and evaluate their bills. They will complain when they find something wrong. But once the company is providing reasonably “good bills” to its customers where one plus one equals two, customer complaints will have little to do with the billing process.

The basic tenet of billing is that “the bill is the ocean,” which means everything a company does flows into and eventually appears on the customer’s bill. Therefore, the customer’s billing complaints will reveal problems upstream in areas such as advertising, marketing, sales process, service offering, operations, etc. In this way, customer billing issues should be viewed as an internal diagnostic tool. Billing issues provide timely, useful information from current customers who provide detailed information and are passionate enough about the issue to inform the company of the issue and demand resolution. Resolving them will have real impact on the business and can be measured simply by tracking the reduction in billing issues.

There is no real trick to “listening to your bills”. You don’t need to learn a new language, and there is no secret decoder ring or babel fish required. You just have to listen — really listen — to hear what they are telling you. The obvious issue with billing complaints is the customer is unhappy and won’t pay or wants a refund, which leads to the company becoming unhappy. To make everyone happy again, the company needs to respond to the customer and solve the issue.

Complaints need to be resolved at both the micro and the macros levels. The micro level is the immediate issue and the goal is to satisfy the customer. The macro level requires more time to review and categorize the documented complaints and issues for a defined period of time and then to analyze, identify and resolve the major issues. The most common and significant issues can be identified by applying Pareto Analyses and the Pareto Principle (the 80/20 rule). Once the issues to be focused on are identified, apply Root Cause Analyses (RCA) to understand why, how and when the problem occurs. Once you have the details from the RCA then the company can permanently resolve the issue.

Below are three cases where billing complaints identified other issues and how the companies responded.

1. Blockbuster: The first case is a true story that you will likely remember and may have experienced. It is an example where a company refused to “listen to their bills” even when those very bills were screaming at them about what was wrong with their advertising. (Ironically, the ads were designed to increase sales by solving the customer’s most frequent complaint.)

On January 1, 2005, the video rental chain Blockbuster launched a massive advertising campaign promoting “No more late fees.” The promotion was aimed directly at the number one customer complaint, Unlike the heavily regulated prescription drug industry where ads must include every single possible bad thing that might happen to you, the Blockbuster ads didn’t provide the complete details of the new policy. Customers were happy to not be charged late fees when they returned the video, dvd, game cartridge etc., a few days late. However, the customers were shocked, angry and felt deceived and ripped off when they were charged the full retail cost (less the rental charge) for an item that was not returned after seven days.

Blockbuster’s billing complaints sky rocketed after this ad campaign. Billing was definitely not the cause of this issue; it was a classic case of Blockbuster not “listening to their bills.” They ignored the billing complaints. The unhappy customers responded to the hidden terms and the lack of response from Blockbuster by taking their business elsewhere, getting the media to report on Blockbuster’s deception and filing class action lawsuits. Had Blockbuster listened to the billing complaints and proactively responded to the complaints which were mostly about not disclosing the full terms of the new policy, they could have avoided a lot of bad press, expensive lawsuits and losing and creating angry consumers. In 2009, Blockbuster quietly reinstated late fees.

2. “JustAnother Tel”: The second case was told to me by a reliable source about ten years ago. I have always believed it to be true but have been unable to find any supporting documentation it may just be urban myth. Regardless of its historical accuracy, it is a great example of a company that listens to its bills and tenaciously investigates the root cause of the issues that it bears repeating regardless.

During the early 1990s a local telephone service provider—let’s call them “JustAnother Tel”—had found that their customer’s most frequent billing issue was requesting a credit due to a service outage. JustAnother Tel’s policy was to provide a credit to any customer if they suffered an outage and also requested a credit. The cost of the credits was increasing and JustAnother Tel wanted to control or ideally eliminate them, so they created a task force to investigate and solve this issue.

When the task force investigated the root cause of outage credits by identifying the most common causes, their research revealed something interesting. The most common cause for service outages was due to telephone line breaks, most telephone line breaks were caused by a telephone pole being damaged, most telephone pole damage was due to auto accidents, most auto accidents happened on curves in the road where the car goes off the road and hits a telephone pole, and JustAnother Tel’s operations manual requires telephone poles to be placed on the outside of curves in the road. By simply changing the manual so the poles would be placed on the inside of curves, they could significantly reduce service outages.

JustAnother Tel’s attention to “billing issues” and recognizing they had nothing to do with billing led them to fewer outages, improved operation efficiency, lower costs maintaining their network, increased customer satisfaction and less credits, thereby increasing revenue by providing a more reliable service.

3. “UniqueData Mobile”: The third case is “based on a true story” – it occurred during my tenure at a previous employer – but certain elements have been altered to protect confidentiality. Notwithstanding a few changed details, it is a great example of how a company prevented problems by anticipating what the bills would tell them.

A cellular phone service provider — let’s call them UniqueData Mobile — was preparing to launch a new service targeting heavy data users by offering unique content. The service was going to be revolutionary and the strategy was to make the pricing plans also break industry standards. The differentiator to be highlighted in the advertising and point of sale materials was to be “five free video clips per month included.” There was no question this would be a ground breaking service and that it would be well received by consumers. While this strategy met all the objectives of the sales, marketing and product teams, it had not been vetted by the billing team.

The problem was that billing, a key element in any service industry product, was unable to support this pricing strategy (five free video clips) because of the way the service had been designed. The data feed to the billing system provided only bytes of data consumed, without any information about what type of data such as video, audio, surfing the web, ring tones, etc. The limited information in the data feed meant counting the videos downloaded, identifying the free videos or charging for the additional videos could not be supported.

UniqueData Mobile realized if they went live with the planned strategy they would have had a lot of frustrated customers with “billing issues.” Customer complaints about not seeing the videos they got for free, what they were being charged, and an abundance of questions about downloaded megabytes.

UniqueData Mobile “listened to their future bills” and tried to change the data feed to the billing system, but in the end were unsuccessful and were forced to change their marketing and sales strategy. The company didn’t initially realize how integral billing is to the overall service provided to the customer and how it needs to be considered in the earliest phases of product design, but fortunately for them, they did recognize its importance prior to launching the service and avoided bad customer experiences by proactively changing their strategy.

In this economy, or any economy, finding a cost-effective way to improve your company is easy. Simply remember to listen to your bills…they are talking to you.

 
Joe Robinson January 28, 2010 04:49 AM
Yet again David, you present us with great common sense. I'll place a sizeable bet that "justanothertel" was not from the UK!! If companies heeded every one of your warnings and everything were perfect, would the billing manager get any thanks or would he be thought of as a pedantic prophet of doom? It is a thankless task where perfection is expected as the norm but your problems are caused by others who are blind to the root cause.
Steve Goldmintz January 04, 2010 07:16 AM
Businesses can capitalize on customer contact. The Billing communication is a viable conduit.
nick green December 29, 2009 11:55 AM
great ideas. how true
Ross December 28, 2009 02:09 PM
How about getting a phone bill that was presented on a map, as an alternate to the accountant's beloved spreadsheet format? How about a bar chart where you show incurred costs against time of day? How about your billing averages shown against the average population? People love to learn about themselves in comparison to others! How about a drilldown into people/businesses in your demographic showing how you spend/use a service, compared to your cohort? I could come up with another ten examples, but why should I have all the fun? And that's the point: Fun. Because bills are anything but fun. So..put corporate data in there...tell your customer how you see her...show them how they are using your services, and SELL THEM service next to the graphs...David, this is not a billing operation, this is a Marketing Opportunity. Another great post.
Mike Deutsch December 24, 2009 09:35 AM
Dave, As an owner of a promotional marketing agency, cash flow is everything. "Sales feed ego's, collections feed families." If the billing is incorrect, families and long term client relationships suffer! Thanks for the enlightening read. Happy New Year! Mike Deutsch
Todd Kesselman December 24, 2009 09:15 AM
This article is a very good reminder for business owners to not simply look at billing as a cash flow issue. I plan to start listening to my bills and really appreciate the author's advice.
Joanne Hayer December 16, 2009 03:59 PM
Fabulous article David! Those scenarios are awfully familiar! And I hate it when my bill is always right.
Ari Segal December 15, 2009 11:06 PM
A very informative and well written article. The examples given show that often there is more to be gleaned from a situation then you might think, whether it's billing or any other aspect of your business.
Karen Fay December 15, 2009 02:05 PM
Terrific article David. I have worked at enough telecoms to see both the positives of "listening to your bills" and the negatives when you don't. You are spot on!
Larry Opack December 14, 2009 09:35 AM
David--Excellent article, especially the points surrounding the true meaning and impact of billing on both short and long term customer relationships. I am concerned that frequently those in upper management too frequently look at billing as only a means to an end (getting paid) rather than looking at it as a tool to maintain or even improve the customer experience. I'd be interested in hearing what you and your readers think, and if anyone has suggestions on how to communicate what is essentially a marketing philosophy to those folks who are used to dealing with numbers rather than people.
Don Bayer December 11, 2009 08:16 PM
This is easy to overlook but very true. My company recently relocated to a new address that is somewhat complicated. It requires a building number and suite number on all incoming mail. When a large customer's checks were not arriving it created a tension between us and them. It nearly cost us the account. Since them we enclose a self addressed return envelope with every statement.
Fred Wachter December 11, 2009 02:49 PM
Excellent piece, David. Its quite timely that you write about this. We were recently in the process of redesigning our bill and had this same discussion. We passed the bill around and reviewed what it said and what it didn't say. We wanted to make sure that we were communicating effectively with our clients precisely what services we had provided. We have found that if a client can fully uderstand what we did, there will be less discussion surrounding the bill.
Eric Platt December 11, 2009 12:15 PM
David, Very informative article. It's another example of the importance of all aspects of an organization working together for the benifit of the customer and the health of the company.
Maurice Kalter December 11, 2009 09:17 AM
Great point on listening. Most of us just "hear" the noise or static, but when you "listen" to the bill you can understand it. I never thought so much went in to billing. You guys are great. Keep up the good work!
Joseph Goldstein December 11, 2009 07:34 AM
David, Excellent article. I never really gave billing the time of day. I plan to revisit our billing methods and try to hear what they are telling me. Hopefully it tells me that my tenants are paying me in full and on time....
Mike Danick December 11, 2009 05:12 AM
I wonder how many large companies have concerted efforts to review "billing issues" with the objective of assessing service quality? As the primary source of Voice of the Customer, it would seem logical. However, as a consumer, it is difficult to know that you're being heard. I think this problem is magnified with product/service convergence at the larger companies where billing and customer service are the last to become integrated. My experience with getting support for phone, wireless, and F/O TV (you can guess the provider) has been very frustrating and this company could learn a lot by listening to the billing process. Good thing the service is solid and my frustration goes away with my surrender.
Larry Moskowitz December 10, 2009 07:40 PM
Ok I get it.I am in sales & I know that as long as I close deals professionally & ethically then I should have NO Billing issues. Which is one of my secrets to lead to more Sales.