Tag Archives: Business Blunders

Email Fail By Sportsnet.ca

Yesterday was a big day in Canada not only because it was Canada Day, but also because it was the first of day free agency in the NHL (…which I guess really makes it a big day for all hockey fans).

In the good ol’ days (way long ago), you’d have to be glued to your radio and TV in order to stay on top of all the wheeling’s-and-dealings. But, now with websites being updates in real-time, social networks updated in seconds, and the ability to send rapid ‘news alerts’ through email, information spreads faster than ever before.

But, it seems some sports news organizations still don’t have a full handle on all the new technologies.

There was a serious EMAIL FAIL by Sportsnet.ca.

Here are 3 unedited “Hockey Central News Alerts” sent out by Sportsnet.ca yesterday.

——Original Message——
From: SPORTSNET.CA
To: XXXXXXXX
ReplyTo: email@sportsnet.ca
Subject: Hockeycentral News Alert – SPORTSNET.CA
Sent: Jul 1, 2010 12:33 PM

New York Rangers re-sign:

Length of contract: 2 years
Average annual value: $925,000

More at sportsnet.ca.

##

——Original Message——
From: SPORTSNET.CA
To: XXXXXXXX
ReplyTo: email@sportsnet.ca
Subject: Hockeycentral News Alert – SPORTSNET.CA
Sent: Jul 1, 2010 6:24 PM

Anaheim Ducks re-sign:

Length of contract: 5 years
Average annual value: $5 million

More at sportsnet.ca.

##

——Original Message——
From: SPORTSNET.CA
To: XXXXXXXX
ReplyTo: email@sportsnet.ca
Subject: Hockeycentral News Alert – SPORTSNET.CA
Sent: Jul 1, 2010 8:08 PM

Montreal Canadiens re-sign:

Length of contract: 1 year
Average annual value: TBD

More at sportsnet.ca.

##

Are you serious?

Sportsnet blasted out emails to their entire hockey mailing list and LEFT OUT the player’s name in the email?

I wonder how many Blackberry’s were buzzing yesterday only to have people look and find out that someone signed a contract, but they were not told who. How helpful is that?

My favorite is the last email above where an unknown person signed a 1 year contract for an amount to be determined. Wow… that email is just oozing with useful information!

Lastly, take a look at the subject. Am I the only one who thinks “Hockeycentral” is actually two words and might have deserved a space in the middle?

Sheesh!

[Many thanks to David B. for forwarding these emails to me.]

Email Marketing Fail By TigerDirect.ca

Everyone who knows me and who has ever spoken to me about email marketing knows that the one thing that I preach over and over again is that ‘content is king’.

It is the content that keeps people opening your email each time and it is the content that ultimately prevents people from unsubscribing because they feel like they are getting some ‘value’ by spending time reading your email.

With that being the case, it’s pretty obvious that your first few emails to a new contact are vitally important because, as they say, ‘you never get a second chance to make a first impression’.

None of this is earth shattering and it’s all pretty obvious, but I guess maybe it’s not obvious to everyone….read on…!

I recently made a purchase at a Tiger Direct store and got an email asking me to confirm my subscription to their mailing list. (Good job so far Tiger Direct!)

After confirming my subscription, I got an email with the subject “Welcome to the TigerDirect.ca Stores List”.

Here is a full unedited screenshot of the email:

Email From Tiger Direct

No need to check your eyes because this email is actually blank.

I’m all for brevity in a welcome email, but this seems a bit extreme!

I’d say this is an epic fail of the ‘content is king’ principal. I wonder if the next email I get will be blank, too? If it’s one thing I need more of cluttering up my inbox, it’s totally blank emails!

Epic Email Marketing Fail > Live Nation

I’ve been in the email marketing industry for so long and in that time I have seem both big & small companies do some amazing and some disastrous things.

But, it never ceases to amaze me when such an epic email marketing fail is brought to my attention, especially when it’s from a company I know and respect. In this case, the company who made an epic fail and proved they really don’t have a clue what’s going on is Live Nation.

Here is the story…
A Simon & Garfunkel concert was scheduled for May 12, 2010 at the Air Canada Center in Toronto.
On April 29, ticket holders were sent an email from TicketMaster saying the following:

Dear Simon & Garfunkel Fan,
Simon & Garfunkel originally scheduled on May 12th 2010, at Air Canada Centre has been rescheduled to July 19th 2010, due to a vocal strain recently sustained by Art Garfunkel.
Tickets originally purchased for May 12th, 2010 will be honored, no action is required.
Customers who wish a refund may obtain one by one of the following methods:
…etc…

So far everything in the story is fine. We are seeing a good use of email to report a very urgent and time sensitive announcement to a mass amount of people.

And then things take a turn for the worse…
This morning (May 17), Live Nation sent out an email with the subject “Thanks for attending Simon & Garfunkel at Air Canada Centre!”

This is the email content:

Live Nation Email Fail
UMMM… hey Live Nation… you didn’t realize that your concert didn’t happen?

No one thought that maybe under the circumstances (since the show was postponed) that sending out a survey asking for feedback might be a little stupid, embarrassing, silly, <insert adjective here>!

I don’t know who Live Nation uses as their Email Service Provider… and I’m not saying they should be dragged in the streets, but someone somewhere seriously screwed up because stopping an email campaign from sending is usually no more than a few clicks.

So, what’s the overall lesson: If you cancel a concert, don’t send out an email thanking people for attending and asking for feedback.

[Special thanks to my good friend Dean M. for bringing this to my attention!]

Who Wants Cold Pizza? Blunder By “Pizza Pizza”

As always, I firmly believe you can learn a lot of good ways to improve your business by studying where other companies seemingly fall dramatically short. It doesn’t matter if that company is in the same industry as you because there is always a more “general lesson” that we can walk away with. By looking at these mistakes it can help you “reframe” or see something you’re doing in a different light and that is a key goal!

Pizza Pizza (http://www.pizzapizza.ca/) is celebrating their 40th anniversary and is Toronto, Ontario’s #1 pizza chain. Their marketing is generally very effective as most people know their ‘phone number jingle’ (…even when drunk, my friends can order pizza…that’s brand loyalty you can’t even measure!!). But, their customer service policies seem a bit questionable.

Here was the scenario that happened:
– We ordered 3 pizzas from Pizza Pizza.
– Each one was completely different and was chosen off their pre-built pizza menu with little to no modifications.

  • The Pizza’s were delivered around 40 minutes later. 
  • Only 2 out of 3 were proper. The other one was a totally different pizza, not even close to what we ordered.At this point it’s important to realize that mistakes do happen. I’m not happy about it, and my friend who had ordered that pizza wasn’t too happy either. But, I can understand they process a lot of orders and while it’s not good, I can see how this could occur.

Of course, the important thing now is that it’s rectified. (Customer Service 101…)

I called Pizza Pizza and selected from their oh-so-friendly-and-always-annoying-like-every-other-auto-attendant that I needed customer service. They kept me on hold for around 10 minutes. [Note to Pizza Pizza: Keeping customers that are potentially angry on hold listening to lame music doesn’t help diffuse the situation, it usually makes it worse!)

When I finally spoke to someone they said their policy is to deliver the correct pizza and let you keep the wrong pizza, but it has to be done right away.

Now, here’s my problem with having to do this right away, which I explained to the customer service rep:

  • Should we let the other two pizza’s get cold while we wait for the other person’s pizza?
  • Should we make this person watch us eat (and savor) our pizza while he waits?(Keep in mind, we’re looking at another 40 minutes of waiting)

After explaining the predicament with the scenario they caused by accident, I said that the only thing we can really do is have my friend eat the wrong pizza. But, because they made a mistake, instead of delivering the pizza right away, they should deliver it the next time I order. After all, in either case they are making a new pizza and sending out someone to deliver it. Who cares if it’s now or later? And, if you force me to do it now, which of the above options should I choose?

I also want to say at this point that since I frequently order pizza, I know that almost all the other restaurants would have had no problem tacking on a free pizza to my next order if they made a mistake.

Pizza Pizza, however, said that is their policy. Final. No ifs, ands, or butts.

What the restaurant chain failed to realize is that the solution they provide to the customer is the dining experience. You can’t recover from that mistake if you get it wrong the first time. (If I eat out and the waiter spills coffee on me…no retakes either!) By not having a responsive and reasonable customer service policy, you extend this negative experience because of the above predicament.

There are a lot of competitors out there and Pizza Pizza’s key to success is loyalty to their brand. I know my friend wouldn’t order from them with so many other options. How many other people are going to start saying the same thing after a negative experience?

I don’t blame the phone rep because I know she really is just following a policy. But, to the folks at Pizza Pizza who created this wonderful policy and the ones who approved it… this is a huge customer service blunder! Seriously, what were you thinking? And, don’t say people would abuse the system because I understand that would be a concern, but don’t put it ahead of good customer service?

Just to end the tale…. Pizza Pizza called 45 minutes later and said they forgot to send the pizza. 40 minutes after that, the pizza got there.