Categories: Articles

Home Depot Could Say, “You Can Do It… Do It Yourself”

I’m not much of a handy person. I can hardly switch a lightbulb (it’s actually kinda sad), let alone fix a serious problem. There was a plumbing issue in the house tonight, so we did a quick jet over to the nearest Home Depot. As we were gathering up the parts needed, we managed to flag down a store associate to help us. Let’s frame this first with two pillars of the Home Depot brand. The first is their tagline: You Can Do It. We Can Help. The second is what it says on every employee’s uniform in the store (which is an apron) – it reads: Hi, I’m (fill in a first name here). I Put Customers First.
It takes some big brass faucets to wear an apron like that and be as indignant to all life matters in your near-vicinity as our associate was. He actually told a customer that he could not help them as he was busy sweeping up something. When we went over to ask him a question, he did not even take his eyes off of the merchandise he was re-stocking to look at us. I would say this Home Depot associate was rude, but I think he would have actually had to make some form of direct eye contact with us to make that kind of judgment call.
So this is another customer service rant? Hardly.
I picked up the book Citizen Marketers this afternoon. It is written by Ben McConnell and Jackie Huba from the infamous Blog, Church Of The Customer. It got me thinking that as much as individuals are marketing on behalf of our brands, what are we doing – as marketers – to make sure that our employees are truly living the brand? Our best shot at Citizen Marketers is to make sure that our immediate circle of influence does, indeed, breathe the brand. There are probably hundreds of people waxing poetic about great experiences they had at Home Depot. But, as long as people like Mr. “Hi, I’m (fill in a first name here). I Put Customers First,” are not living the brand, it makes the second pixel of separation (namely the Citizen Marketer) that much harder to empower.

Mitch Joel

Recent Posts

Six Links That Make You Think #837

Is there one link, story or idea that stopped you this week… and made you…

15 hours ago

Are Best Practices Too Slow For AI?

The technology is usually easy… leadership is the hard part. Many years ago, I used…

1 day ago

The End Of The Human Web?

One of the more fascinating statistics to emerge recently is that automated traffic now accounts…

3 days ago

Winning With AI With Charlene Li – This Week’s Thinking With Mitch Joel Conversation

Episode #1041 of Thinking With Mitch Joel is now live. This conversation with Charlene Li…

7 days ago

Winning With AI With Charlene Li – TWMJ #1041

Welcome to episode #1041 of Thinking With Mitch Joel (formerly Six Pixels of Separation). At…

7 days ago

Six Links That Make You Think #836

Is there one link, story or idea that stopped you this week… and made you…

1 week ago

This website uses cookies.