saska

Customer service gone shockingly right

Comments

OMG. That's the best ever. And what a thrill for the kid, to get to see the Mario and play games.

It *is* awesome. I am in awe of that level of service. You should not only write them a nice thanks, you should send this story to The Consumerist blog.
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...wow.

LT: Yeah, the kiddo was home sick, so when I said, "Do you want to go to Nintendo and see if they can fix it for us?" I am pretty sure he thought it was just fever delusion.

I did send it to the Consumerist. :) And to Digg. Nintendo deserves the love.

Teho: I know.

He will have a GREAT story to tell when he goes back to school.
awesome...found this on digg.

You should add this to the We <3 Wii group. I found one dead subpixel on my brand new DS Lite that I purchased when the DS Lite was released. I called them and immediately was sent all necessary shipping labels to ship it back to the mother ship and get a new DS Lite.
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This is why Nintendo has more fanboys than any other system.
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Miis: I take it your Miis were not editable after they copied them over? Or were they? I heard of a similar story where they weren't...
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Oh, very good news! It's wonderful to hear good stuff like this! Yay to all involved! :))))
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I thought I got good customer service when I had Samsung replace my flat panel monitor. They shipped it to the nearest UPS store and I brought the monitor to swap units. I didn't have to deal with any shipping issues at all.

However your story just blows anything I've ever heard about away. Neat. =)
Nope, I can't edit the Miis.
Thanks raf, I had forgotten I'd joined the group. Added!
If you have bluetooth setup on your PC, you can use Mii Mega-mall ( http://www.miimall.com ) and the Mii Editor (http://www.miieditor.com ) to transfer your Miis to your computer, edit them to match your new Wii (via MAC address), and send them back to the Wii as being editable. More information about that can be found in the Mii Editor FAQ.
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One of my Wiimotes' dpad is cracking down the middle, but they said they could replace it for $25. They even said I could probably wait until it actually cracks before I replace it for the same price.
Thanks for the tip, senocular!
Also awesome. Most peripherals are unwarranteed unless they are DOA.
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Wow, a Vox blog makes Digg frontpage. It's like two bits of good news in one!
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I'm so in love with Nintendo these days...DS lite is my bestest travel buddy. Wii = friday night fun, on my must-have list, and now excellent customer service too. Mario for president :D
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I like how they gave you freebies when you came back to take photos. Other companies would shoo you away if you tried to do that!
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I too can say that place exists. Never gotten anything fixed there, but I have seen it some time ago.
This isn't that big a deal as the fanboys would make it out to be. I bought a TV from Westinghouse Digital and they gave me the same level of service. I didn't have to deal with RMA at all when I told them I lived near the service center in Los Angeles. They told me to simply bring the TV in and my PS3 also to test out the HDMI port. They let me use a conference room to test out my replacement set and did not make me wait 30 minutes for sure...................

All that really happened was that Nintendo saved some shipping money -_-................
I will say that Nintendo's customer service is typically above average but this article is a stupid glorification of that well known fact.
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I paid a $100 over on eBay to get my Wii before the end of the holidays. It seems people are still having problems finding them, so I'm still happy with going the eBay route.

All in all, I'm happy I got the Wii. I love the Virtual Console even if some of the games don't hold up to my memories of them. I wish more great games would come out for it at a steady flow, but I'm hoping this is more because of it being a launch console and less to be the old N64/GameCube problem of a decent game a quarter.

It's good to read a customer service story like this. I just went through a six months ordeal with Sony repair center because my wife accidentally dropped our new camera. They off loaded the repair to Precision Camera in Connecticut. They took forever to repair it the first time. When we got it back, we realized they didn't even fix it. We sent it in again and got it back a month later with a noticeable dent on the cover. We then called them and they claimed it got shipped to them that way eventhough they claim the box wasn't damaged. So now we're left with a busted up yet brand new camera that we had to pay $180 to get repaired.

So the bottomline is to seriously consider the level of customer service and repair an electronics company offers before buying anything.

Hi Chad,

I'm not sure why you're so bothered by the fact that I had a good experience with Nintendo and documented it. Thanks for stopping by, though.

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It is nice to hear about a good customer service experience.
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So cool...it's as if Nintendo has reincarnated the mid-century definition of customer service. I'm still not a Wii owner yet, but stories like this one make me reeaallly want to become one!
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I'm just not a big fan of fanaticism and this article seemed to fall under that realm. I'm just saying that this kind of customer service is not that extraordinary but instead skewed by the content the company creates (games) in this case. Also the fact that they made you wait 30 minutes is not exactly good customer service in my book.

I'm not arguing that Nintendo has some stand up customer service, because I know they do. But it's nothing extraordinary.

I think you completely misunderstood the whole 30 minutes point. I waited 30 minutes while they transferred everything I had earned, purchased, and configured from my malfunctioning system to a new one. When you send in a laptop for repair and wait two weeks, you usually get it back with a wiped hard drive. I think what Nintendo did was exceptional -- they could have had me bring it in, drop it off, and come back for it the next day, or the next week. Instead they fixed it for me the moment I walked in.

Frankly, I get sick and tired of hearing people bitch constantly about the customer service they aren't happy with when they rarely acknowledge the good. Imagine if every performance review you got at your job was about the one thing you screwed up, and nobody ever let it go, and on top of that they never acknowledged when you went above and beyond the call of duty. If you think acknowledging that makes me fanatical, I think you're a cynic and we can just agree that you don't need to read the story.

The perception isn't skewed by the content the company creates. It's in contrast to the performance of other companies in the exact same space (manufacture of specialized technology devices).

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This is a great story. And the idea of reporting great customer service is a wonderful notion.
wow ... great story! great great great experience. i am jealous!
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I worked for Nintendo as a Game Play Counselor from '89-'95. Even back then they held a remarkably high standard of service. It's nice to know they still have top-notch customer service today.
Today's Team VOX post is all about this.

Go Saska! someone in my CO/VOX hood is internet famous!

(Also, I am still jealous about the Wii.)
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I found your post through the team Vox page. your experience is pretty awesome. it's good to know that there are still companies out there that actually want to please their customers by--gasp!--taking care of their problems. this is how companies earn repeat business.

i can totally understand the feeling of getting good customer service. i worked retail for nearly ten years, and both of the stores i worked in were ones that emphasized customer service. i was pretty good at that aspect of my job, if i do say so myself, so i really appreciate it on those (unfortunately rare) ocassions when i actually get good customer service!

what i really don't understand, however, is how many companies out there don't care about pleasing their customers. i guess they figure they make so much frigging money that it doesn't matter if they treat a few people like crap and lose a couple customers out of the deal. one of my training manuels said that people are likely to tell up to ten people about a BAD service experience, but maybe two or three (it might be as many as five) about a GOOD experience.

so it's good to hear about a good one!

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Saska, congrats on a wonderful customer service experience. a rarity, as most of us know, and well-worth highlighting.

Thanks all!

mariser, I saw on Team Vox that you and AuntieM and a few other people were out of Vox all day yesterday, and that makes me feel bad. Whatever hosts my blog stayed up admirably, but I'm very sorry to hear that it may have been at the expense of other users. I hope they're unrelated, and if they are related, I hope that SixApart already has something in the works to address that in the future. Not that I plan on achieving any level of notoriety again soon. =D

oh, don't feel bad. for all we know, it was a co-ink-i-deent. and even if it wasn't, is a good heads-up to the 6A peeps.


Have to agree - it is all too easy to complain, but when you get good service it is worth taking that few moments to ping off an e-mail (or blog in your case) and say thanks. I've done it a handful of times when people have gone out of their way to be helpful and polite - and it feels good (and no doubt good for whoever helps you when their boss reads it!)
Hooray for Saska and Nintendo! How does it feel to be famous?
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oh wow. Is that really why I couldn't get on Vox for most of the work day yeasterday? Don't apologize though...because I actually got a little bit of (shhhh) *work* done.

I agree about the whole thing of bad vs. good customer service. It is common to get horrible customer service, and it's unfortunate that we are so surprised when we actually get the good kind, but it definitely should be acknowledged as much as the bad. I think that if companies got such glowing feedback about their customer service, they might be a little more conscientious about keeping their customers satisfied.