Voxware, a leading provider of cloud-based voice and analytics solutions for the supply chain, has released findings from its fifth biennial consumer survey addressing consumer reaction to incorrect and late deliveries. Findings from the survey conducted this fall indicate that retailers relying on outdated procedures deliver substandard customer experiences and make mistakes that damage both the brand and the bottom line.
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Key survey findings include:
- Incorrect orders persist: 41 percent of respondents returned an item due to retailer error (incorrect size, color or wrong item altogether), up from 30 percent in 2018.
- Less patience for late deliveries: Even if the item is correct, 26 percent of consumers returned items because they were delivered later than promised at the time of purchase, up from only 10 percent reporting returning late items in 2018.
- Wrong again: Incredibly, 51 percent of respondents said they returned an incorrect item only to have a wrong item sent the second time around.
- Mailing it in: 56 percent of consumers prefer the option to return items via pre-paid postage, up from 47 percent in 2018. In-store returns saw a decrease in preference, dropping from 41 percent in 2018 to 34 percent this year. This may indicate increasing comfort with returning via mail and is also attributable to avoiding in-store returns this year due to COVID-19.
97 percent of consumers agree or strongly agree that the way retailers handle returns influences whether they will purchase from that retailer in the future. This figure has continuously increased over the 10 years that Voxware has conducted this survey. Now, if a mistake is made, nearly 40 percent of consumers expect to receive the correct item within 1-2 days of informing the retailer of the mistake.
Delivering the right product on-time is critical and even more so during the holiday season when consumer expectations are at an annual high. Last month, Voxware reported that 30 percent of consumers are much less likely to purchase from an online retailer who has failed to deliver an item on-time in the past. More than 43 percent of consumers surveyed in 2020 report being very likely to share their negative experiences online (up from 33 percent in 2018 and 23 percent in 2016). Given the year many retailers experienced, this is not the time for delivering mistakes.
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