
When you’re trying to assess how a business really sees the world, you’ve got two choices.
You can pour through every page on their website, and check out all their publicly available strategy documents, covering things like their commitments to people, customers, and product quality.
Or you can visit them and ask to go to the toilet.
The first of these will tell you almost nothing. That’s mostly PR puffery which will tend to gloss over any difficult areas and whitewash and/or greenwash their company activities at every turn.
(And, before you say it, AI won’t help. It’ll just summarise the thousands of lines of puffery to the standard of a moderately-intelligent 8-year-old. And I can save you the bother – they all say customers come first, that their people are their most important asset, and that they are responsible corporate citizens who wouldn’t dream of doing anything to harm the environment.)
The second strategy tells you everything.
I used to work in the manufacturing sector, and when I visited suppliers and potential suppliers’ factories, I always made an excuse halfway through the factory tour to nip to the toilet on the shop floor.
What a company really thinks about their people is basically the conditions you find in there.
And what they really think about their people will manifest itself in how much their people are likely to care about the products they would be making for us.
And how much people cared about the products they were making for us directly determined the quality of our own products, and thereby the quality and service we could give to our customers in turn.
It’s a strategy that never failed.
Clean, decently-furnished, well-cared-for toilets on the factory floor always translated into “Grade A Supplier”.
Along the way, I may have gained a reputation as the man with the weakest bladder in the printing industry, but that seemed like a small price to pay at the time…
It’s more difficult with customers
Most businesses aren’t stupid.
There’s usually a big difference between customer toilets, imbued with the gentle fragrances of the Himalayas and fully-stocked with soft towels made from 500 thread count Egyptian cotton, and their smelly, grease-encrusted, graffiti-covered equivalents on the shop floor.
Most businesses will put their best foot forward with a customer, because they are the people bringing money into the business.
Which is why I had to manufacture an excuse for a shop-floor toilet visit to see what was really going on in our suppliers’ factories.
Generally, though, businesses are successful in maintaining the divide between the “front of house” and the “backstage” elements of their business. And not just in how they manage their toilet facilities.
So, while it’s rare I come across this in the wild, finding a business whose customer toilets are in a complete state is pretty rare. They might not care about their workforce in the slightest, but most companies will at least pretend to care about their customers.
Now, that’s not to get all shirty about those days when everything has gone wrong inside a business and, for whatever reason, the customer toilets are in a complete state and everyone inside the business is horrified and endlessly apologetic about the situation.
There, but for the grace of God, go us all.
I tend not to get too judge-y about isolated incidents.
But there’s a café not far from me – part of a nationwide chain – which always puzzles me. Their complete lack of concern for their customers over an extended period of time is so pronounced that I’ve developed a mild fascination with the place.
At least 18 months
This has been going on for at least 18 months but, one weekend just before Christmas, it took a turn for the worse. Something I wasn’t sure was even possible.
For about 18 months, the soap dispenser in the customer toilet has been broken. It was one of those clear plastic containers that is screwed to the tiles next to the sink. You push a button at the bottom of the container to release a dose of liquid soap when you want to wash your hands. You know the kind of thing, I’m sure.
Now, this café isn’t somewhere I go regularly out of choice, due in large part to the state of their toilets, but also because about half the times I go there, they make my flat white with semi-skimmed milk instead of full-fat milk, thereby undermining one of the most fundamental laws of the universe. (Although it’s also possible I’m a little pernickety about the way people make my coffee…)
It is, however, particularly convenient for a place I do visit semi-regularly. So when I was out and about just before Christmas and felt the need for both a restorative flat white and a brief stop to relieve the pressure building up on my bladder, this particular café was the most convenient option.
Not expecting much, I nipped to the toilet, where the soap dispenser has been broken for 18 months. The usual ultra-cheap pump-action bottle of handwash placed next to the tap as usual, although this time with no handwash actually in it…so I guess nobody had paid this bathroom the slightest bit of attention for hours, even though they had a lot of staff on and the café itself wasn’t that busy.
The screws which used to be there to support the old, broken soap dispenser were still there, though, sticking out of the tiles.
However, in today’s little twist, it turned out that the hand dryer was now broken too and a roll of that blue paper roll they use in catering had been placed on the floor next to the toilet for customers to dry their hands with.
I don’t know about you, but even allowing for the fact that emergencies happen, of all the places I might put hand-drying paper in the customer facilities, right next to the toilet is not one of them.
Having thoughtfully put in some paper towel for hand drying, however, nobody in this nationwide chain thought it might be a good idea to also have somewhere to dispose of the paper after it had been used to dry people’s hands.
So, piled up in the corner of these customer toilets was a small mountain of discarded, used blue roll, again giving the distinct impression that no member of staff in this café had as much as popped their head around the door of the customer toilets for at least a couple of hours.
I very quickly got about my business…whilst touching nothing I didn’t absolutely have to…and dried my hands on a paper napkin from another café chain I happened to have in my coat pocket. I took that napkin with me and dropped it into a bin outside, then kept on moving.
There was no way I was getting a coffee from that place after experiencing what they really thought about their customers.
The irony
The irony with organisations like this is that they think looking after customers is an overhead cost to be minimised, when (a) usually it costs little or nothing anyway and (b) it’s actually a great strategy to drive revenue growth with a phenomenal RoI.
All you’ve got to do is care. Even just a little.
The cost of fixing that soap dispenser 18 months ago? I don’t know – £50…£100?
Not much however you look at it. But they’ve lost at least £50 in potential sales since just from me as I’ve stopped visiting this coffee shop when I’m in the neighbourhood. It’s become a place I actively avoid unless I have no choice, whether for caffeine-related or bladder-related reasons.
If just one other person felt the same way, on the cost of fixing that soap dispenser, they’re making a 50% Year 1 RoI. That is a level of return you won’t find from many other investments nowadays.
But more than that, my experience is that the people who can’t get the little things right rarely get the big things right.
So, even though this café offers their chain’s usual variety of food options, I never buy food there and only buy my coffee in a takeaway cup.
An establishment that has as casual an approach to the state of their customer toilets is unlikely to be fastidious about their food hygiene standards. Or indeed whether or not they use whole fat milk in their flat whites. The overall impression given by this place is that they are people who just don’t care about their customers.
Now, I’m sure that because they are part of a national chain, the local staff have to get approval from someone to spend money to fix soap dispensers, and similar things. Which is fine – for the sake of a week or two, I’d understand. But after 18 months, either the local staff haven’t cared enough to raise the issue or the national chain’s managers haven’t cared enough to spend £50 for their customers.
Doesn’t really matter which one it is. Neither option gives me a warm and fuzzy feeling or makes me want to spend my money there.
But I’m sure, overall, this outlet must do well enough financially that nobody from head office wants to close it down. There’s limited local competition (the nearest similar establishment is a couple of miles away) so they can, to some extent, milk that for as long as that advantage exists.
However, if another coffee shop chain gets the OK to put an outlet a few hundred yards away, and that chain offers clean toilets and flat whites made reliably with full-fat milk, then, firstly, I’m going to stop there vastly more often than I currently visit the café with the broken-down toilets.
I’ll end up giving them more money just because I’ll go there more often. I might also buy some food from them as well, further boosting their takings. And I probably won’t be the only person.
But, more to the point, what is the cost of keeping your customer toilets at least moderately clean over and above the cost of fixing a soap dispenser?
Effectively nothing. All it takes is for the store manager or a member of staff to care just a little and get things sorted out. Sure, it might take a couple of minutes every now and again to clean the toilets, but the staff are already there and being paid a straight salary whether they do nothing or clean the toilets, so why not clean the toilets?
And it’s cost-effective too. Fixing the soap dispenser or the hand dryer is a one-off cost, but then it means you don’t need to think about those things from that point onwards. The alternative is that part of your intellectual bandwith and a couple of minutes here and there needs to be devoted to sorting out the toilets when, if the hand dryer and soap dispenser are fixed, you don’t need to spend that time or mental energy at all.
That’s why I find it so puzzling when people don’t look after the small details.
In literature, they eyes might be the window to the soul.
But, when it comes to a customer experience, the toilets are the window to how that company really thinks about them.
Decide on the maintenance schedule for your soap dispensers and hand dryers accordingly. Little things really do mean a lot…in your customers’ eyes.









