Cadastre-se agora para um orçamento mais personalizado!

Burger King publicly shamed an unhappy customer. Then it did it again

jun, 04, 2022 Hi-network.com

Clever psychology?

Getty Images

Some companies choose to irritate customers.

You can understand the impulse.

Recommends

  • The 100+ best October Prime Day deals you can buy: Live updates
  • The 5 best VPN services (and tips to choose the right one for you)
  • The best Android phones you can buy (including a surprise pick)
  • The best robot vacuum and mop combos (and if they're worth the money)

You've bought something from a brand and its marketing people really, really want to know what you really, really thought of the purchase experience.

Sometimes, the enthusiasm to know gets a little much -- something I recently experienced when I bought one or two things at Best Buy.

After the first ten emails begging you to fill out a survey, your eyes glaze over, and you block the emails.

Burger King, however, has decided on a different approach.

It'll give you a free Whopper when you offer your feedback on your purchase experience.

However, to motivate you to do that, Burger King released a pungently humorous ad that shows what happens when a customer gives feedback to the wrong person.

Also: Burger King just made an announcement that truly embarrasses McDonald's

This particular customer is unhappy.

She's at a Burger King drive-thru and complains that she's "asked them four different times to make me a Western Barbecue Burger."

Four times does sound like a lot. What could possibly be the problem? Well, she says they're her "a hamburger with lettuce, tomato and cheese onions, and I'm not leaving."

You might assume, then, that she's called Burger King headquarters or perhaps the Better Business Bureau.

But no. She's called 911.

Also: Starbucks is quietly expanding a service that may make customers drool

The dispatcher, as politely as she's able, tells her to go west and stop clogging up America's most serious helpline.

"Madam, we're not going to go down there and enforce your Western Bacon Cheeseburger."

The mere thought of it, though, is captivating.

The Burger King customer, however, insists deputies be sent to help her.

Some might insist it's so very wrong to shame customers. But the notion that the customer is always right is often wrong.

Some customers are just appalling. However, to my life-addled mind, calling them out publicly and using it to encourage feedback is a fascinating twist.

In fact, Burger King thought it so fascinating that it found another customer to shame.

This time, the customer is upset that he rolls up to a drive-thru and asks for lemonade, only to be told that the restaurant is out of lemonade. Naturally, he called 911 too.

His complaint extended to being told that he'd have to wait fifteen minutes for his food because he talked too much.

The 911 dispatcher is unreasonably reasonable. She asks if the customer has handed over the money. He has not. He hasn't received food either. So she suggests that he could just drive away.

He complains he's hungry. "Sir," she replies, "Come on, come on. I know you don't seriously think the police need to make Burger King give you food faster."

Also: McDonald's just gave (some) customers something brilliant

Surely not. That's the job of robots.

For Burger King, though, shaming these customers publicly will help others find a better -- and more profitable -- way to make legitimate complaints.

"If you have feedback to give, at least get something out of it," muses Burger King wryly. And that's when it takes the opportunity to sell its feedback URL and make its oddly generous offer.

And there, I was thinking that the best way to get people to complain online is to get Elon Musk to buy your site.

I fear, though, that if the customer in the ad went to this URL and filled in the survey, she'd still be unhappy with her Whopper and would, yet again, call 911.

Or worse, shame Burger King on Twitter.

Featured

New iPhone 15 Pro overheating reports: Still too hot after iOS 17.0.3 and fresh issues arise after the updateGenerative AI will far surpass what ChatGPT can do. Here's everything on how the tech advancesiPhone 15 Pro review: Prepare to be dazzledThe best USB-C cables for the iPhone 15: What the experts recommend
  • New iPhone 15 Pro overheating reports: Still too hot after iOS 17.0.3 and fresh issues arise after the update
  • Generative AI will far surpass what ChatGPT can do. Here's everything on how the tech advances
  • iPhone 15 Pro review: Prepare to be dazzled
  • The best USB-C cables for the iPhone 15: What the experts recommend

tag-icon Tags quentes : Negócio Comércio eletrônico

Copyright © 2014-2024 Hi-Network.com | HAILIAN TECHNOLOGY CO., LIMITED | All Rights Reserved.