"Tell us about your recent customer experience."
Once, those words sounded like opportunity. "Sure thing! Glad you asked!"
Wielding sharpened pencils, we etched Customer Comment cards with feedback about occasional purchases — buying a car or browsing refrigerators.
Today? We're more likely to mutter, "What, again?"
That's because we're being asked to rate not only our Mazda, but our mocha. Also our dental exam, online shoe order — online anything, really — veterinarian visit, motel stay, mascara purchase, deck paint choice, Uber driver, ticket-buying experience.
"It's a fad, and it's backfiring," said John Tschohl, president of Service Quality Institute in Minneapolis. "It's creating a very high level of annoyance.
"Everybody's jumped on the bandwagon. It's like if you don't have a survey, you're not in the system, baby."
Each year, millions of ratings are sought for various reasons: a desire to monitor satisfaction, a love affair with data, the increasing ease of reaching customers, or the idea that loyalty grows when a company shows interest in consumers' opinions.