Yes it is. If you do not design your entire support system, from the ground up, to deal with ignorant customers, then you are going to pay a heavy price.
If you make the assumption that customers are going to read the manuals, and you build a support center that isn't designed to handle the load of calls that will come in as a result of people not reading the manual, and you don't have your agents trained to give answers that are in the manual, then you are doomed to failure.
That's just the way it is.
The only way you can run on a thin call center is to make your product extremely simply to use.
Right now Dish is not making something about their products easy to use. Whether that is the product, the upgrade options, the installation process, the equipment, whatever, I don't know. What I do know is that Dish is driving their customers to make more calls than their competitors. And because of this, Dish is having more of their revenue eaten up in support cost.
And all of these complexity is making it more difficult for their CSRs to quickly answer questions. This is making Dish customers less satisfied.
Most likely this is due to Dish rolling out too many products, upgrades, services, and equipment changes without taking into account the human support factor. Perhaps the engineers or marketers have had too much power in their decision making.
Look at Dish's product lines. They have D500, D1000, D300, D1000+, SuperDish 105, SuperDish 121 satellite dishes. Satellites at 61.5, 105, 110, 118.7, 119, 121, 129 and 148. More receivers in play than almost anyone can name. Family Pack, AT60, AT120, AT180, AEP, locals, HD-Bronze, HD-Silver, HD-Gold, HD-Platinum, Superstations, Sports packages, PBS, Several premium movie packages & combinations, tons of foreign language channels, public info channels, multiple music channel packs, and more. Then there are several different switches and LNBs. Different service plans. Different lease options. Different trade-in programs. PPVs. Billing problems (and a very unfriendly, hard to interpret billing system). Multiple programmable remotes.
They are trying to provide support on this extemely complex product offering through multiple call centers located around the world. And to top it off, their automated problem resolution solutions are below average.
This is a company in DESPARATE need of a simplified product line. At some point, they are going to have to bite the bullet and start de-supporting older products.
I know a little bit about this because one of the operations I oversee for my employer is a call center. Dish has created a call center nightmare environment.
number one complaint from my customers..They can't stand the foriegn call center.
Next most popular complaint is they don't understand the use of the EQ...
This one really gets me....These people have just ordered a satellite system to be installed in their home and thewy know absolutely nothing of what they have purchased...They ask ME what their mothly rate is going to be!!!! The haven't a clue of the concept of a dual tuner reciver..Quite frankly, dish should stop pushing these receivers on people of limited technical ability..I get pretty sick of the deer in the headlights look I get from some customers AFTER the product demo.....Customers seem to think they have no resonsibilties...
I think Dish in it's haste to be first to to put new technology on the market has left them vulnerable to excess customer complaints....