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Consumer Rage Reaches All-Time High and Businesses Feeling it in Bottom

Complaints Key Showing Complaining Or Moaning Online

The survey found that businesses risk losing $887 billion in future sales because they handle customer complaints poorly.

By Stacy M. Brown
NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent
@StacyBrownMedia

According to a new study, second-rate customer service efforts have led to more consumer rage than ever, and patrons have become more belligerent when complaining.
Customer Care Measurement & Consulting (CCMC) and the Center for Services Leadership, a research center at the W.P. Carey School of Business at Arizona State University, conducted the National Consumer Rage Survey.
It found that “the alarmingly high rate of rudeness by customers was linked to things that have become normal in business settings.”
The survey found that businesses risk losing $887 billion in future sales because they handle customer complaints poorly.
That figure is up from $494 billion in 2020.
In addition to charting the trend of customer satisfaction with complaint handling over the past two decades, the study authors said the latest release of the rage survey breaks new ground by exploring the alarming incidence of customer incivility tied to what has become commonplace in everyday business settings.
“Customer rage explores the experience of complaining about a product or service problem,” the authors wrote in a news release.
They said that customer incivility looks at the growing problem of rude, disrespectful, and violent behavior in the marketplace that comes from social and political conflicts between customers and businesses, such as disagreements about politics, sexuality, culture, and faith.
“This first foray into customer incivility reveals that unseemly customer behavior tied to clashes in values between businesses and their customers may be the new normal, as nearly one of every two Americans encountered two or more acts of customer incivility in the past year,” the authors found.
According to the survey, the top customer rage highlighted in the study included:

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