Sunday, February 13, 2011

Is the Boycott Groupon Movement Anti-Business? No.





Some people have written and accused me of being anti-business for railing on Groupon. I don't think so at all. Here's my rebuttal to people when they say that Groupon intent was not to commit fraud or intentionally rip off people and that I shouldn't complain:

I think Groupon intent, in this case, is important, but what's more important is how, after a screwup is found, how they handle the problem. The CEO of Groupon fails to understand his customers feelings and, on top of that, is perceived as having a a bad attitude... For that, should Groupon be out of business? 


If people were asking the government to intervene, I would be against that. No one is asking for government intervention to stop him. And, if he does fail (doubtful) no one is stopping him from learning a lesson and trying again.

The people complaining have every right to do so and are completely in line with Libertarian ideals.

Products, services, and understanding peoples wants and needs are all integral parts of running a company, They are not mutually exclusive.

If people complained about your products you'd better listen to them and make them happy or you take the risk of creating ill will and these people today, thanks to the Internet, have to power to organize. Ignore these people at your peril. 

One need to only look at Hosni Mubarak for evidence of what that can lead to.

Here's a simple example of what I think about any free association movement or boycott (which I believe is completely in line with Libertarian ideals): 

1950. A restaurant opens up. The food is bad. The restrooms are dirty. Customers complain. The owner takes a bad attitude and fails to apologize and fails to promise try to do better next time... He says things like, "Other restaurants are worse" (maybe so, but not the point). Word of mouth spreads and the shop gets a bad reputation...... From that, perhaps the restaurant gets no customers then goes out of business... Hopefully, the owner might learn a lesson and try again - next time with some humility and more accommodation to CUSTOMER concerns.

2011. A restaurant opens up. The food is bad. The restrooms are dirty. Customers complain. The owner takes a bad attitude and fails to apologize and try to do better next time...He says things like, "Other restaurants are worse" (maybe so, but not the point). Word of mouth spread and gets around the way word gets around in 2011: people use the Internet....... From that, perhaps the shop gets a bad reputation. From that, no customers then goes out of business... Hopefully, the might learn a lesson and try again - next time with some humility and more accommodation to CUSTOMER concerns.

I'm sure there were people who wrote letters in defense of McDonald's when there were (still are) boycotts. Did anyone write letters of defense of toys with lead paint when parents considered boycotts of Mattel due to lead in children's toys from China (until the US government intervened and made them illegal)? Perhaps these are outrageous comparisons, but I think they prove my point. 

People can defend Groupon, but to criticize other people from trying to freely associate and create a voluntary group to get a company to understand customer anger and frustration - in order to get that company to react to their concerns - is a disservice to the free market and Libertarian ideals, no? 



I would be right there with the defenders of Groupon if the boycotters were trying to get the government to ban Groupon or control their business.

No. Calling for a free association, a voluntary boycott of Groupon in order to get them to understand people's unhappiness and concerns is not anti-free market. It is the free market in its purist form.

Customers deserve to have their concerns addressed and
their voices heard. They also have the right of free association and freedom of speech. True tenants of the free market and a free society. 


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3 comments:

  1. You're totally right, Mike. Ignore the morons that are attacking your point of view. No need to justify their idiocy...

    "i"

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  2. Well put. If nobody says anything, then Groupon will continue to dole out horrible customer service and nothing will change. People have a right to complain when something they paid money for is not what was advertised to them. I think the CEO needs to make an apology video apologizing for the last video, in addition to the screw up. Maybe then he can salvage a tiny bit of his sinking ship in the Japanese market.

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  3. I agree with you 100% great article. I am a business owner who got bullied by groupon to advertise outrageous discounts promising to make it right. We lost so much on our Groupon promotion and Groupon just ignores our complaints as if we do not matter. To top it off we found a better company that gives the same advertising without taking off our discount and Groupon wants to charge us for working with another advertiser. They are not a good business to deal with. Don't be bullied into giving up your bottom line to bring customers through the door. Go elsewhere.

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Comments must be succinct & relevant to the story. Comments are checked frequently and abusive, rude or profane comments will be deleted. I’m just one of many bloggers who answer questions online and sometimes for the press. I usually handle questions about Japan, marketing or the economy, so in those areas I’m more likely to make sense and less likely to say something really stupid. If I post something here that you find helpful or interesting, that’s wonderful. This is my personal blog. If you don't like what you have read here then, just like when you go into a restaurant or bar that allows smoking, if you don't like it, there's something at the front that has hinges on it and it is called a "door."