I grew so frustrated with my shopping experiences at Home Depot over the years that I vowed never to set foot inside any home improvement store with orange signage. In fact, I fully intended to make the company the subject of a blog-rant a year ago. However, I knew Home Depot was making a serious effort at improving customer service - someone even told me they had recently adopted Net Promoter - and I wasn’t sure one more loud complaint from me would be productive. Moreover, the primary reason for my unhappiness was my experience in the store nearest my home. At that store, there was never anyone available who could answer questions, and the self-checkout process was so deeply flawed that most customers failed to navigate it successfully without assistance. However, Home Depot has more than 1700 stores in the US alone, and my store outside of Boston may just be an outlier.
So last week I happened to be driving by a Home Depot on the way to our summer house on Cape Cod, and I decided to give it a try. As I walked in, I was greeted by a friendly rep who asked if she could help me find anything. Indeed she could. I was looking for a water cooler that would match our white kitchen - and I had no idea whether the store even carried such an item, let alone where it would be located. Good news: she took me to the back of the store and helped me find an apparently ideal model in white. The checkout process (unlike at my home store) was painless. The checkout clerk made sure I noticed an invitation on the receipt to submit feedback. She warned that the survey would take 15 minutes but added that taking it would enter my name in an award lottery. Ordinarily, I never bother with these cash register receipt surveys because I have yet to find a real Net Promoter success story among their users. The tiny response rates create an enormous sample bias, so there is no fair way to hold store managers accountable for their scores.
Then came the bad news. When I arrived at our Cape house, I discovered that the water cooler inside the box was not white at all. In fact, the company website informed me that the coolers don’t even come in white - the only white unit is in the picture on the box. So I thought to myself, what a great opportunity to give feedback. That rep, as friendly as she was, did not know the merchandise, and her bad advice was going to cost me an 80-minute round trip to return the item.
But the rep’s error seemed trivial compared to the mistakes made by the designers of the feedback system. The feedback process was much worse than my flawed shopping experience. Frustratingly, there was no way to provide clear and simple feedback about my problem. Page after page of questions scrolled onto my screen, 40 or 50 by my count. Most were completely irrelevant to what I wanted to communicate. Skipping any question, however, made the screen freeze temporarily, and then brought a strongly worded rebuke in a bold orange font. As I struggled through the labyrinth of questions, I realized that this survey had nothing in common with Net Promoter - in fact, it broke almost every rule in my book.
I can’t imagine who would actually finish these surveys. A customer must notice the invitation on the receipt, find the website, and log on with long password codes that link to the specific transaction. He or she must then navigate a 15-minute journey through questions unlikely to have much value to store managers. (They don’t need a customer survey to determine if the aisles are cluttered - they can just patrol the store.) In fact, if I were a store manager and my bonus was held hostage by this system’s scores, I would revolt.
What’s most frustrating to me is that it doesn’t need to be this way. There are several retail companies that are doing this right (Enterprise Rent-A-Car, Advance Auto Parts, and Apple Retail Stores, to name a few). It is distressing that the talented executive team at Home Depot can have such good intentions and yet get this so wrong. For the sake of the NPS brand, I hope they don’t refer to their approach as having anything in common with Net Promoter. Better yet, I hope they will re-read The Ultimate Question and follow its advice to make some fundamental changes in their feedback system.


Hi Fred,
When I read the first paragraph, I went back 2 yrs ago, and recalled all the consistent unpleasant experience I had with HD stores. The area I live, I’ve been to 2-3 locations, and experiences was more/less the same...Short of staff, and lack of customer follow-up were very much the standard pain-point when I was considering a major material-labor project work with HD. And of course I decided not to pursue any business having seen that the company has failed to do any good on the front-end...
Now, I would like to add some thoughts around why and how the erratic execution happens or happening right now at many companies.
First of all, your book, concepts are very easy and simple, and very effective in changing minds if people are looking for a process to change and how. I believe what makes execution hard is due to these primary reasons that traditionally run companies are facing:
What ends up happening is that old and new survey approaches are mixed; the purpose of the survey is so unclear (and everyone wants to be in it) the survey becomes 10 mins and you really miss the “ultimate” reason….(By the way, I think this phenomenon happens for any type of change initiative in large companies)…
Then of course people start questioning the method instead of their execution around it… I've seen this movie...