Categories
Uncategorized

Disney World Employees Sift Through Trash to Find Couple’s Wedding Rings

Scrooge McDuck standing in a pile of trash bags

Here’s a little story about customer service: while staying at a hotel villa in Disney World, Paul Campanale tossed away a cardboard container, not realizing that it contained his wife Karen’s engagement, wedding and five-year-anniversary rings. Employees at the hotel told Campanale that recovering the jewelry would be impossible, but executive housekeeper Drew Weaver realized that the trash from the Campanales’ villa wouldn’t have reached the compactor yet. Weaver and seven volunteers from staff put on protective clothing and went dumpster-diving — and found the rings.

I’m telling this story here, in a blog primarily aimed at techies in startups and small- to medium-sized companies, because it’s an excellent object lesson…

Click here to read the full story.

Scrooge McDuck standing in a pile of trash bags

Here’s a little story about customer service: while staying at a hotel villa in Disney World, Paul Campanale tossed away a cardboard container, not realizing that it contained his wife Karen’s engagement, wedding and five-year-anniversary rings. Employees at the hotel told Campanale that recovering the jewelry would be impossible, but executive housekeeper Drew Weaver realized that the trash from the Campanales’ villa wouldn’t have reached the compactor yet. Weaver and seven volunteers from staff put on protective clothing and went dumpster-diving — and found the rings.

I’m telling this story here, in a blog primarily aimed at techies in startups and small- to medium-sized companies, because it’s an excellent object lesson.

Those of us in small companies and startups often like to boast that one of the upsides of working at such a place is that you get to “wear many hats” or “play many roles” rather than just being siloed within the confines of your job description. However, I’ve seen on many occasions that as soon many of these boasters will often shy away from any customer-facing role because they see it as a miserable time-sink on par with meetings. It’s one of those times when you see so-called “small and agile” people suddenly revert to “big dinosaur” thinking and try to foist the burden onto someone else — someone’s whose job description is a closer match for the unwanted task: “Isn’t that marketing’s job? Or sales? Or maybe the receptionist can handle it.”

Sifting through the trash for something that a customer threw away out of absent-mindedness or distraction — some less charitable people I know who go so far as to say “stupidity” — could be seen as a low-value exercise. After all, the odds of finding the missing rings might have seemed low, the search could take a long time and occupy people who could be doing other things, and there was no profit to be made. A manager’s — and seven volunteers’ — willingness to perform an unpleasant task that probably wasn’t in their job description has probably earned the loyalty of the Campanales, who in turn have probably become life-long Disney resort evangelists. In fact, I’m certain that their evangelism is why I heard about their story, and also why you’re hearing about it now.

The lesson to take from all this? Everyone in a company, no matter how insulated from the outside world, is customer-facing. Make your customer feel special, and you’ll be special to them.

I’ll close with this chart from Creating Passionate Users, in which Kathy Sierra explains the difference between your customers feeling satisfaction, love and passion about your company:

Chart illustrating the difference between your users feeling satisfaction, love and passion
Click the chart to see it with its original article on Creating Passionate Users.

[Found via Consumerist.]

One reply on “Disney World Employees Sift Through Trash to Find Couple’s Wedding Rings”

Good post. Lots of good stuff to think about.

It’s human nature to want to shy away from unpleasant time-consuming tasks with little direct or immediate payoff.

But as you’ve illustrated with this story, the tangible rewards will certainly outlast the time and effort spent.

Comments are closed.