thoughts, observations, and commentary from an entrepreneur / CEO / husband / dad / consumer / producer / fan / advisor / participant
20 Dec
I ordered - or thought I ordered - a few things for Adena from Sundance.com last week. Their site has always been frustrating from a usability perspective, and I found the checkout process particularly confusing this time (it’s been a year or so since my last order.) I thought I checked out correctly, and when I didn’t get a confirmation email, I assumed it was caught in my spam filter or just delayed.
For once I was ahead of the game. My order was placed (or so I thought) well in advance of Christmas and Adena’s birthday a few days before. Regular shipping had it slated for delivery last Thursday or Friday, and even if it was a bit late, no big deal. Until, of course, Adena decided she wanted to celebrate her birthday this past Saturday rather than the following one as I’d planned.
Friday morning, I logged into Sundance.com. I saw the order in my history, but no delivery date was displayed. Everything looked normal, just no indication that it had shipped. I called, and they explained that the order had been “placed” but not “completed” meaning they never got the credit card information. I had to provide that via phone to complete the order — there was no such option online. When I complained about that, the rep gave my favorite archaic line (not a direct quote):
“We don’t work with the online group — you’d have to talk with them about the web site ordering process. I don’t know anything about it.”
When will they get it? I don’t care about their groups and misguided legacy divisions. I just want to give them money — why do they make it so difficult?
The rep went on to say that if I wanted to get my gift in time, I’d have to pay express shipping. Not acceptable, I explained, and to her credit she came through with approval from her supervisor to send it next day without any extra charge.
I appreciate their independence and wisdom for the gesture, and I remain a Sundance fan, just not of their outdated web site. Hopefully they’re tracking “customer service” costs like this in a way that will help their web group justify reworking their user experience.
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