After this experience, I started thinking about the rules and regulations we make as we run our business rules that seem perfectly logical to us but totally illogical to our customers rules that may even cause us to lose customers. I discussed this with several business colleagues and friends and every one of them had similar stories to tell, even one storeowner who realized he was guilty, too.
Closing Time at the Cleaners Jeff, the owner of a mens store, was going on a market trip Sunday and planned to pick up two suits from the cleaners on Saturday afternoon. Knowing the cleaners closed at 5:30, he left his business early in what he thought was time enough to get there. Well, slow moving traffic caused him to arrive at 5:40. The door was locked but he felt he was in luck as he saw the owners car in the driveway and could see someone moving in the back of the shop. Though he kept loudly knocking on the door and calling to the person inside, there was no response. Jeff made the market trip without those suits, vowing never to trade with that cleaners again. But this started Jeff thinking about his own store closing time and that he might also be guilty of the same rigid practice. Usually, he locked the doors exactly at the 6 PM closing, then went to the office to tally up. The salespeople left by the back door and he wasnt far behind. So Jeff set a new rule, one more customer-friendly. The official store closing time would still be posted as 6 PM. But the door would not actually be locked until 6:15. He felt the additional 15 minutes of time this cost him was worth it.
Contrast this cleaners story with one that Mike, the bell captain at the Hotel Algonquin in New York City, told me about his experience in a new Nordstrom store that had just opened in his New Jersey neighborhood. Mike and his wife were looking around the store and stopped at the customer service counter to ask what time the store closed. The associate smiled and said: Whenever youre finished shopping, sir. What a very customer-friendly answer! Mike and his wife felt like royalty. Doesnt Nordstrom have an official closing time? Of course. But apparently you wont get thrown out of the store with bells going off.
Rule: No exceptions to a promotional policy. A local store was having a promotion: Buy $75. in our fragrance department and receive a complimentary crystal vase. My purchase came to $72.75. I asked if I could have a crystal vase. Oh, Im so sorry, but the purchase has to be $75. When I protested, I was told that if we make an exception for you with that amount, we would have to do it for everyone who asks. (So?) I was annoyed with this rigid and unreasonable attitude and since I knew I could find the same brand in at least two other stores in town, I decided to go elsewhere to make my purchase. Company policy should be to make a decision on a situation based on its own merits, never a blanket rule. Since I obviously felt strongly enough about this to cancel the purchase, wouldn't it have been better to please me by granting my request than to annoy me enough to leave the store? That store lost more than $2.25 that day with its no-exception rule. When the amount is within a few dollars of a promotion, exceptions could be made
1. when the customer specifically asks and
2. as a gesture of goodwill even when the customer does not ask.
Since your purchase is so close, the salesperson could say, Id like to give you a complimentary crystal vase for shopping with us. Choose to delight the customer at every opportunity youre given. There is another lesson in this scenario: the power of differentiation. If this store had an exclusive on the fragrance label or something different about the offerings that I could not find anyplace else, they would have had me. They didnt. Whether you sell apparel, lumber, or insurance, the more you differentiate your company from the competition, whether in products or in services, the more you tie your customers to you.

