BiF-4 Insights – Tony Hsieh – Zappos.com

We have a Kentucky warehouse with 4 million pairs of shoes.

Importance of striking an emotional connection with customers.

Tony started LinkExchange before selling it to Microsoft:

  • Sold it because it went from five people to 100 people
  • Hired people without the thought of cultural fit
  • After the sale, formed an investment fund and invested in 20 companies including Zappos.com

Now we have 9 million customers and a focus on having the best customer service:

  • We sell clothing, handbags, and electronics now
  • We also look at Virgin for inspiration
  • We give a lot of customers free upgrades to overnight shipping
  • Our number one growth driver is repeat sales and word-of-mouth (WOM)
  • We want to talk to our customers (we put an 800# on all of our web pages)
  • We run our warehouse 24/7 to maximize speed even though it is not the most cost effective way to operate it
  • We are focused on building lifelong relationships, not on maximizing transactions

Our number one priority is not customer service, it’s company culture:

  • No call scripts, we hire well and trust our employees to serve the customers
  • Get the culture right to better control brand and customer service rather than planning every process
  • Treat customers like people (funeral and flowers story)
  • We do two different sets of interviews
    • Hiring manager and team
    • HR team does culture fit interview
    • Have to pass both interviews

  • We will also fire people if they are harming the culture
  • Everybody goes through the same four weeks of training, then weeks on the phone and one week in the warehouse in Kentucky
    • We have even fired people during training

Story about customer purchasing a wallet, trying it, and returning it:

  • The person left $150 in the wallet when they returned it
  • The person had been blaming their kids for the $150 disappearing
  • Warehouse worker sent letter to customer about the $150
  • Woman was very grateful and stopped thinking her kids took it

Core Values should be things you are willing to commit to, including your hire/fire decisions.

For more information on the talk, go here.

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Braden Kelley

Braden Kelley is a Design Thinking, Innovation and Transformation Consultant, a popular innovation speaker and workshop leader, and helps companies use Human-Centered Changeâ„¢ to beat the 70% change failure rate. He is the author of Charting Change from Palgrave Macmillan and Stoking Your Innovation Bonfire from John Wiley & Sons. Braden has been advising companies since 1996, while living and working in England, Germany, and the United States. Braden earned his MBA from top-rated London Business School. Follow him on Twitter and Linkedin.

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