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Managing the Chaos of Customers

In other words, variability is a fact of life with customer-operators. Here are the different forms it can take:

Arrival: Your customers don't all want service at the same time or at times that are necessarily convenient for you. Grocery stores find themselves swamped during the evening rush hour, while the lines at Dunkin' Donuts can extend for half a block at

8:00 a.m.

Request: Not everybody orders the same thing. Each client of an advertising agency is executing a unique marketing strategy, and vacationers at a resort want different amenities. Even customers of a single-service business like Jiffy Lube show up in different makes and models of cars.

Capability: Customers have different knowledge, skill, physical abilities, and resources, which means that some customers perform tasks easily while others need hand-holding. In a medical setting, the ability of a patient to describe symptoms can greatly affect the quality of care. But so can the person's ability to negotiate the medical bureaucracy.

Effort: Customer-operators decide for themselves how much effort to invest in production tasks. Company controllers don't always hand over well organized files to independent auditors, and shoppers don't always return their shopping carts to the store.

Preference: Even customers who want the same service may have very different definitions of quality. One diner appreciates the servers' introducing themselves by name; another resents the presumption of intimacy. Some clients of a law firm might construe a top partner's attention to detail as reflecting the importance of their case; others might complain that those expensive billable hours could be doled out more Judiciously to less costly associates. Subjective preference adds a multiplier effect to all other forms of customer variability.