Sometimes you find weird stuff…

Top Most Gifted books from Amazon.com

Top Most Gifted books from Amazon.com

So I was noodling around Amazon.com today while looking for a new product to build a site around. I’ve created a few different affiliate sites that are getting traffic, but no sales yet, so I’m thinking “hey, this hasn’t worked yet, maybe I need MORE sites!”

Anyway, I’m wandering around the site looking for something cool to sell when I find the link for “Most Gifted” which is not the link for only the best and brightest books, but rather those “Gifted” to others most often, which makes a lot more sense, right?

Well, the top entry was The Lost Symbol, Dan Brown’s new book, no surprise.

Second place was Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days, also not a surprise as this is a huge kids book.

Next came Maurice Sendak’s Where the Wild Things Are which also makes sense with the new movie just coming out.

And in fourth place, the wildly popular Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association. Wait, huh? What? Seriously? The 4th most popular gift in Amazon’s book is a publication manual? Seriously, how many people are sending this? What are the stats on this, and how would YOU like to receive it?

I thought so.

After that, it follows with Ted Kennedy’s memoir so it makes sense again. Then it gets weird. Either people don’t use Amazon for gifting, or people don’t gift the way I think they do.

Simple iPhone stand

This cool little device came up through a Twitter user I follow (Sorry, I lost the user). There’s tons of people out there who watch movies on their iPhone, iPod Touch or iPod Nano, and we all struggle with the need to hold the darn thing just so in order to be able to watch the movie comfortably.

And as many people who need something, there are equally as many different solutions. From iPhone holders made with Binder clips, to elaborate pencil easels. Or you can spend $100 on a purpose built stand with adjustable rubber grips and iMac matching base.

For $10, this little pyramidal bean-bag sure looks like it’ll do the trick. I’m sure an enterprising person could make their own and save $10 (plus S&H) but why?

Customer Service Ain’t Rocket Science

Ok, I’m going to rag on the lowly clerks who work at retail stores, so if that offends you, please feel free to stop reading.

But I’m not going to blame them entirely.

Yesterday, I went to buy some shoes. I was feeling kinda crappy anyway, having one of those days where everything annoyed me and probably didn’t want to be there. So my dear husband and I ventured to a store downtown known for inexpensive sports shoes (note, this is not Payless!! They sell crap I won’t even touch much less pay for) to find me a simple pair of running shoes.

We enter the store and head for the shoe wall. We passed 3 employees without a single on of them making eye contact. We perused the shoe wall for about 5 minutes trying to find something I liked and finally found a pair. There was a bored looking girl leaning against the pillar about 5 feet away so Chris asked her for a size 10 in this style. She made eye contact with him, but as I watched, she actually rolled her eyes, looked bored, whispered something and wandered off.

Chris headed off to look at shorts or t-shirts while I waited in the shoe department, looking at other options in case these didn’t work out. A minute later, I notice she’s holding up the wall again. I assumed (wrongly) that someone else (taller?) was finding the shoes for her. I sat and waited. After about 5 minutes, I headed off to find Chris as I was tired of waiting. As he comes back to me, she says – “there are no 10s” to him. So I said “How come you didn’t tell me that, I was sitting there waiting for you to bring me the shoes” and things went down hill from there.

The girl in charge of the till asked us to leave. I said “Don’t you care that your employee doesn’t know how to do her job?” She told us to fill out a card to send to head office and told us we weren’t welcome back in the store. Huh?

There’s a Starbucks near us who has a pretty good staff overall. But there’s one guy who is almost never on the bar. He’s always on cash. Even then, he seems pretty stunned most of the time. I have no doubt that being a barista is harder than some jobs. Remembering how to make so many drinks and having customers customize them to within an inch of their names is tough.

I don’t know why they keep this guy on staff. He barely handles orders at the till and often needs them repeated. After going there regularly, the baristas know my order before I get to the till but he doesn’t usually get it when I tell it to him. Slow…ly.

Excellent customer service is hard, takes the right mindset, presence and thoughfulness. I understand this as I have been doing varying forms of customer service for 25 years, since my first paper route. I really appreciate the staff who really get it, own it and excel at it. My expectations are not that high. I honestly don’t expect the guy at Starbucks to remember my order. I expect him to get it right when I give it to him. If he wants to excel, he’ll remember it.

These days, whether because of high turn over, lazy management (I put the blame here), staff who have never had really good customer service to model from, low wages or whatever, your general retail experience in downtown Vancouver is less than stellar, and on the decline.

If you’ve had either great or crappy customer service experience, let me know. I want to shop at the good places.

I ended up buying shoes at Costco. Sadly, low expectations of service there and I’m never disappointed.

Greatest Invention Since Post-It Notes?

If you frequent Starbucks, or really any place that sells HOT to-go beverages, you’ve probably experienced “the geyser” as I call it.

You’ve got your $8.00 140 degree cinnamon chai tea misto latte double espresso, dressed it with raw sugar, whole milk and a sprinkle of chocolate powder, put the lid on and you’re ready to go. On the way out the door, your toe hits the kick plate and you jostle the drink a little bit, but you’ve got it under control.

Here comes “the geyser.” Just a little bit of your hot drink spurts out the drink-hole (which sounds dirty) and drops directly onto the web of your hand scalding you, pissing you off and causing you to drop said $8 .00 drink, cursing and swearing.

Well, Starbucks now has a way to prevent that. They started showing up in Vancouver late last year, and they may not be as new as I think. One exuberant barista called it “The greatest invention since Post-It Notes” which I may not entirely agree with, but they are great.

What is it called? I have no idea, but it’s basically a swizzle stick with a plug on the end. Or is it like a miniature pacifier with an extended stick? With a bit of research it seems to be called a “splash stick” and was introduced like a year ago as a result of feedback on the Starbucks social networking/customer service site called My Starbucks Idea.

I’ve got to say I LOVE these little sticks. I don’t know if they rival Post-It’s or some of the other brilliant inventions, but I do like the idea they came from an online community suggestion. I also REALLY love that they keep the rain out of my coffee as I trudge back to the office or condo with my coffee in my now-safe-from-burning hand.

5 Things I’m Learning From Twitter

twitterFor a few months now I’ve been hanging out on Twitter. I use my name as a personal account (@jeffrose) and I set one up for West Coast Favors (@westcoastfavors) to help promote that company. So far it’s been “interesting” in the sense that there’s a LOT of noise in the signal.

Using tools like Twhirl, then TweetDeck and Twitterific to manage the flow of information seems to be the key. Depending on how many people you follow (get updates from) it can be overwhelming trying to keep track of the conversations.

What have I learned? Nothing overly earth-shattering YET. There are a few lessons in development still. Here’s what I’ve got so far.

  1. There’s a lot of people out there using Twitter to communicate, micro-blog and more importantly (to me) make money.
  2. You can communicate a lot of information and detail in 140 characters. You can also make a lot of mistakes in that small space.
  3. Twitter is a tool to be used. Whether for good (@livestrong), evil (Someone I’m sure), education (Mars Rover used Twitter) or just fun you can reach a broad responsive audience.
  4. Time exists more on Twitter than anywhere else. Twitter is all about the NOW. Although it has a memory (ie: search & history) people mostly care about what’s you’re doing NOW. Which is it’s founding principle.
  5. On Twitter, nobody knows if you’re a bot, or delaying, or auto-tweeting. (I am not and don’t, although I am testing delayed Tweets for West Coast Favors).

Twitter themselves don’t seem to have a money-model yet. It’s all free. There are rumors floating about changing that shortly, but in the mean time, everyone can use it, tie to to blogs, cellphones and Facebook for full coverage.

How are companies using it? Tune in another time for that answer.