I can attest that the first thing I recognize when I return to DC is how bad customer service is....
D.C., Baltimore score supreme in being slow
Washington Business Journal - 3:52 PM EDT Monday by Neil AdlerStaff Reporter
If you are looking to take out money from your local bank, buy groceries, purchase clothes or other consumer items, prepare to wait.
And wait.
And wait.
Washington and Baltimore have the ignominious distinction of being the two slowest cities in the United States when it comes to customer service.
In a survey by the Mystery Shopping Providers Association, which collected more than 10,000 responses from mystery shoppers throughout North America, Baltimore and Washington had ratings of 5.13 and 4.58, respectively, worst among the cities measured.
What that means is in Baltimore people on average wait 5 minutes, 13 seconds, for their purchase or activity, while in the District it is 4 minutes 58 seconds.
On the flip side, those with the top two scores are Phoenix, at 3 minutes 5 seconds, and Portland, Ore., at 3 minutes 30 seconds.
Baltimore also had the worst return ratio, at 77.3 percent. This means that only 77.3 percent of shoppers would return to the same site in Baltimore based on the wait time. D.C., mirroring its slow wait time, came in second worst, at 77.6 percent.
The survey asked consumers to measure the time they spent waiting in line at banks, clothing retailers, department stores, fast food restaurants, sit-down restaurants, grocery stores, gas station convenience stores and other retail locations.
The Mystery Shopping Providers Association is a Dallas-based organization representing about 200 marketing research and merchandising companies, private investigation firms and training organizations. In the survey it focused on the top 25 U.S. cities based on population.