Leaders in Customer Service
L.L. Bean used to be known as the world’s largest cataloguer in the outdoor specialty field, back when catalogs were a popular way to buy something. This year, L.L. Bean’s Internet sales will exceed its catalog orders for the first time. The transition has been disruptive for the company, but it hasn’t diminished its customer focus.
In 1994, I featured L.L. Bean in a chapter on determining customer requirements in my book, Total Quality Management. It hasn’t lost a step. BusinessWeek ranked it #1 on its list of Customer Service Champs (March 1, 2010), citing its loyal followers, liberal return policy, and folksy sales staff.
BusinessWeek uses J.D. Power & Associates data on the perceived quality of a company’s staff and what customers think of its processes, supplemented by surveying 5,000 people and asking them to nominate three companies they felt were the best at customer service and three they thought were the worst. You can read about the whole methodology by clicking on the link to the article above.
Here, then, are the 2010 Customer Service Champs:
- L.L. Bean
- USAA
- Apple
- Four Seasons Hotels & Resorts
- Publix Super Markets
- Nordstrom
- Lexus
- Ritz-Carlton
- Barnes & Noble
- Ace Hardware
- Amazon.com
- Wegmans Food Markets
- Starbucks
- Amica Mutual Insurance
- Charles Schwab
- Jaguar
- WestJet
- American Express
- Enterprise Rent-a-Car
- Branch Banking & Trust
- Panera Bread
- True Value
- Dell
- Southwest Airlines
- Fairmont Hotels & Resorts
To read about how your organization can become a customer service champ, click on these articles:

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