(Press-News.org) PULLMAN, Wash.—There are jerks, and then there are jerks.
Joel Anaya has given them a fair amount of study, focusing on that very special jerk who can take a routine service experience—dining out, paying at a cash register, air travel—and make it a nightmare.
Anaya has even coined a term for it—"customer service sabotage"—and discerned seven different categories of rude customers who can be a serious liability for the service industry.
"Customers don't just go to a restaurant to enjoy a burger," he says. "They go to have a good time, to enjoy the ambience of the establishment. If that's ever affected, if they ever leave liking your hamburger but saying they had a bad time, that's not a win for the restaurant."
Anaya, a McNair scholar and senior in Hospitality Business Management at Washington State University, recently presented his findings at the school's Academic Showcase.
Anaya, 21, of Pasco, Wash., had set out simply to study customers who misbehave. Then he realized no one had looked at how those customers affect the experience of others.
For data, he culled more than 200 accounts of customers annoying fellow customers from four websites: notalwaysright.com, dinnersfromhell.com, flightsfromhell.com and servernightmares.com.
"I never even heard of these websites before," says Anaya.
It was an odyssey in retail-level strangeness.
"There are these weirdoes," Anaya says, "but these weirdoes are now going to be coming into contact with your good, normal paying customers."
In analyzing the different accounts, Anaya came up with the following categories of customer sabotage.
"Badmouthers," the most common saboteurs, used profanity and raised their voices.
"It's crazy what a few bad words can do, how uncomfortable they can really make other customers nearby," says Anaya.
"Paranoid shouters," a close second in Anaya's tabulations, are "really irate customers who don't know how to handle themselves." They are like badmouthers but start yelling at the first sign of inadequate service or a perceived injustice.
Customers with poor hygiene were a close third.
"Quite frankly, they smelled," says Anaya. Or they sweat on to other people, picked their noses, sneezed openly, or all of the above. They are most often found on airplanes.
Some customers make outlandish requests, like the one who insisted on paying at a grocery store in pennies while others had to wait.
"Service rule breakers" don't follow social norms, like waiting their turn instead of cutting in line.
"Bad parents with bad kids" refuse to discipline unruly children whose behavior is bothering others.
This category made Anaya nervous, as if he might be blaming the parent on a flight whose child is crying uncontrollably. But he let the data speak for itself.
"I just made it objective," he says. "'This kind of customer affected this kind of service experience.'"
Unknowledgeable customers will belabor service workers with endless questions or minor quibbles while others have to wait.
Anaya hopes that managers and workers can use the categories to reevaluate customer complaints and in some cases realize their service wasn't to blame, or that the service experience might be changed to head off such behavior in the future.
"It just begins with the acknowledgment as managers to say to your employees, your front desks, your servers: 'Keep an eye out for them,'" says Anaya. "These are the type of people that exist. These are the types of people that may affect our service quality perception from other customers."
INFORMATION:
A new category of heel: The customer service saboteur
WSU student analyzes ways customers get on each other's nerves
2012-05-18
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Governor Christie Signs Tough Road Rage Bill Into Law
2012-05-18
New Jersey Governor Chris Christie recently signed a bill into law that increases penalties for bodily harm caused by aggressive driving.
Jessica Rogers' Law
Jessica Rogers was 16 when she was involved in an automobile accident that left her paralyzed from the chest down and necessitated 24 surgeries. Jessica's accident was the result of aggressive and reckless driving behavior, known commonly as "road rage."
After her accident, Jessica's parents lobbied for tougher laws for those that commit road rage crashes, believing that current laws did not penalize ...
New York Lawmakers Debate Reforms to Scaffolding Law
2012-05-18
Some New York lawmakers and other tort reform advocates wish to reform the state's scaffolding laws, reducing the liability of contractors and property owners and leaving injured employees at risk.
Current New York Scaffolding Law
New York is the only state in the nation that holds contractors and property owners absolutely liable for any worker injury sustained from a fall or a falling object, otherwise known as a fall injury. This type of liability is known as "strict liability."
The law also requires employers to take all reasonable action to prevent ...
Parents are happier people
2012-05-18
RIVERSIDE, Calif. — Contrary to recent scholarship and popular belief, parents experience greater levels of happiness and meaning in life than people without children, according to researchers from the University of California, Riverside, the University of British Columbia and Stanford University. Parents also are happier during the day when they are caring for their children than during their other daily activities, the researchers found in a series of studies conducted in the United States and Canada.
These findings appear in a paper — "In Defense of Parenthood: Children ...
Bluetooth baby
2012-05-18
Checking the heart of the unborn baby usually involves a stethoscope. However, an inexpensive and accurate Bluetooth fetal heart rate monitoring system has now been developed by researchers in India for long-term home care. Details are reported in a forthcoming issue of the International Journal of Computers in Healthcare.
Vijay Chourasia of the LNM Institute of Information Technology in Jaipur and Anil Kumar Tiwari of the Indian Institute of Technology Rajasthan, in Jodhpur, explain how fetal phonocardiography is the modern equivalent of the stethoscope in ante-natal ...
New York Institutes Reforms to Improve Bus and Bicycle Safety
2012-05-18
Two new safety reforms should help keep New Yorkers safe on the Empire State's roads and highways.
Cuomo Funds New Bus Safety Inspection Program
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo promised $1 million to fund a new bus safety inspection system targeting the worst-performing companies.
Cuomo's decision came on the heels of a tumultuous year for New York fatal bus accidents. One accident last March resulted in the deaths of 15 people. The accident involved a bus which routinely shuttled gamblers from New York City to a popular Connecticut casino. Another accident last ...
Zebrafish could hold the key to understanding psychiatric disorders
2012-05-18
Scientists at Queen Mary, University of London have shown that zebrafish could be used to study the underlying causes of psychiatric disorders.
The study, published online in the journal Behavioural Brain Research, found zebrafish can modify their behaviour in response to varying situations.
Dr Caroline Brennan, from Queen Mary's School of Biological and Chemical Sciences who led the study, said: "Zebrafish are becoming one of the most useful animal models for studying the developmental genetic mechanisms underlying many psychiatric disorders; they breed prolifically ...
Specialized care by experienced teams cuts death and disability from bleeding brain aneurysms
2012-05-18
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — People with bleeding brain aneurysms have the best chance of survival and full recovery if they receive aggressive emergency treatment from a specialized team at a hospital that treats a large number of patients like them every year, according to new guidelines just published by the American Stroke Association.
Diagnosing and immediately treating this kind of "bleeding stroke", and using advanced techniques to prevent re-bleeding and aneurysm recurrence, reduces the chance of immediate death and disability by 30 percent for patients with aneurysm-related ...
Physician Privacy Versus Patient Informed Consent
2012-05-18
The Debate Continues
The need for surgery can make anyone feel vulnerable. Most people find solace in the fact that they will be treated by surgeons with many years of training. Even so, the rate of medical mistakes that result in injury or death is shocking: a 1999 study by The Institute of Medicine reported that medical errors were responsible for almost 100,000 deaths and more than one million injuries every year in the United States.
Those rates have steadily increased in the past 13 years since that study was performed. In fact, The New England Journal of Medicine ...
Common genetic variants identify autism risk in high risk siblings of children with ASD
2012-05-18
Toronto, CANADA (May 17, 2012)— By focusing on the identification of common genetic variants, researchers have identified 57 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that predict—with a high degree of certainty--the risk that siblings of children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) will also develop the condition. The findings were presented at the International Meeting for Autism Research.
ASD is among the most common form of severe developmental disability with prevalence rates up to 1 in 88 children. Boys are greater than four times more likely to be diagnosed with ...
Fighting bacteria's strength in numbers
2012-05-18
Scientists at The University of Nottingham have opened the way for more accurate research into new ways to fight dangerous bacterial infections by proving a long-held theory about how bacteria communicate with each other.
Researchers in the University's School of Molecular Medical Sciences have shown for the first time that the effectiveness of the bacteria's communication method, a process called 'quorum sensing', directly depends on the density of the bacterial population. This work will help inform wider research into how to stop bacteria talking to each other with ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
A graphene sandwich — deposited or transferred?
New light-powered motor fits inside a strand of hair
Oil rig study reveals vital role of tiny hoverflies
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia researchers boost widespread use of dental varnish across pediatric network
iRECODE: A new computational method that brings clarity to single-cell analysis
New NUS-MOH study: Singapore’s healthcare sector carbon emissions 18% lower than expected, a milestone in the city-state’s net zero journey
QUT scientists create material to turn waste heat into clean power
Major new report sets out how to tackle the ‘profound and lasting impact’ of COVID-19 on cardiovascular health
Cosmic crime scene: White dwarf found devouring Pluto-like icy world
Major report tackles Covid’s cardiovascular crisis head-on
A third of licensed GPs in England not working in NHS general practice
ChatGPT “thought on the fly” when put through Ancient Greek maths puzzle
Engineers uncover why tiny particles form clusters in turbulent air
GLP-1RA drugs dramatically reduce death and cardiovascular risk in psoriasis patients
Psoriasis linked to increased risk of vision-threatening eye disease, study finds
Reprogramming obesity: New drug from Italian biotech aims to treat the underlying causes of obesity
Type 2 diabetes may accelerate development of multiple chronic diseases, particularly in the early stages, UK Biobank study suggests
Resistance training may improve nerve health, slow aging process, study shows
Common and inexpensive medicine halves the risk of recurrence in patients with colorectal cancer
SwRI-built instruments to monitor, provide advanced warning of space weather events
Breakthrough advances sodium-based battery design
New targeted radiation therapy shows near-complete response in rare sarcoma patients
Does physical frailty contribute to dementia?
Soccer headers and brain health: Study finds changes within folds of the brain
Decoding plants’ language of light
UNC Greensboro study finds ticks carrying Lyme disease moving into western NC
New implant restores blood pressure balance after spinal cord injury
New York City's medical specialist advantage may be an illusion, new NYU Tandon research shows
Could a local anesthetic that doesn’t impair motor function be within reach?
1 in 8 Italian cetacean strandings show evidence of fishery interactions, with bottlenose and striped dolphins most commonly affected, according to analysis across four decades of data and more than 5
[Press-News.org] A new category of heel: The customer service saboteurWSU student analyzes ways customers get on each other's nerves