Friday 17 October 2008

Fobbed off and let down

There’s no rule of thumb that will help us find a good funeral director.

 

The soulless efficiency of the firm that sells us car insurance suits us very well so long as it’s the cheapest. But when someone has died, what we look for is an intensely personal service, and it naturally seems most likely that we’ll get that from a little independent family business rather than from a branch of one of the conglomerates (Dignity and the Co-ops) or a chain of funeral directors. The big boys know this, they know that the perception is that big equals impersonal and soulless, and that is why, when they acquire a family business, they like to go on trading misleadingly under the old family name.

 

If they believed that they were doing the best possible job they’d have the confidence to proclaim UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT! The fact that they don’t tells us something, doesn’t it?

 

And yet, as a great sage of the industry observed to me recently, there are good big ‘uns and bad little ‘uns -- and the other way about. Yes, there are some nasty little tykes out there, and some really top-notch branches of the big ‘uns.

 

We get very few scandals in the UK funeral industry but we do get muddles and screw-ups. It is famous in the industry that these are normally committed by the Co-ops. Here’s an example:

 

On 1 September this year the funeral for a Leeds woman, a stickler, in life, for punctuality, was arranged by Co-op Funeralcare for 2.20 at Lawnswood crematorium. The hearse and 2 limousines didn’t get to her daughter Kathleen Gamble’s house until 2.40. Fortunately, the crem was able to accommodate the delay. On a busy day, it wouldn’t. Mrs Gamble was furious: "Somebody should be held accountable for making a really sad day for us even more traumatic, emotional and stressful. My mother was never late for anything and then she turned up late to her own funeral.”

 

There’s Greenwich Mean Time and there’s Funeral Directors’ Time. FDT makes GMT look sloppy and inexact. Funeral directors, you’ll be interested to know, obsess about time. When, on a recent Holby, the cortege for a 12 o’clock funeral pulled up at a quarter to, all the watching undertakers dived behind their sofas, heads in hands. A well run cortege arrives bang on the dot, no earlier, no later. The Co-op’s crime in Leeds was, in funeralworld, well, horrible.

 

Funeralcare has a multitude of administrative systems designed to make its operation (literally) idiot-proof. In this case, they blamed their howler on a “communication breakdown”. We can only speculate on what really happened. It looks as if the idiots won.

 

Could the little independent family firm for whose clients I lead funerals have committed such a howler? Absolutely not. How do I know? Because, simply, I know how much they care. Every funeral is, for them, an event, not just another job.

 

Even a moron-proof admin system will not be proof against an employee who doesn’t care enough or is too busy.

 

When Funeralcare finally got around to explaining their cock up to Mrs Gamble more than three weeks later, this was her response: “Apparently plans are in place to prevent it from happening again but I just don't believe them. We feel completely fobbed off and let down."

 

We know how she feels. This blog has invited Funeralcare on three occasions to write and tell us about its ethos and, despite promising to do so, it has failed. It is incredible that, given a free opportunity to target consumers, talk about itself and get us all to love it, Funeralcare goes on passing up the chance, falling into contempt and letting down its best employees into the bargain.

 

To what do we ascribe this? Arrogance? Complacency? Stupidity?

 

Let’s be kind. Let’s put it down to a “communications breakdown” and hope that “plans are in place to prevent it from happening again”. The only reason why this blog presents a one-sided view of Funeralcare is because they won’t rise to their defence. I believe that there are two sides to this story. Readers will form their own judgement.

 

For the fourth time I shall now write to Funeralcare, asking them to respond, refute  -- and advertise for free.

Labels:

6 Comments:

Blogger Antler said...

Late is not an option..........

'Late' in funeral terms is the worst form of inpoliteness and excusable only in the event of ALL possible routes being shut off by the police - or other such un-natural occurances!!!

Too many funerals on one day for too few men or vehicles to cover comfortably is not a valid excuse and smacks of greed to me.

18 October 2008 at 14:07  
Blogger Zinnia Cyclamen said...

In over 10 years in the business, I've never yet been late for a funeral - and neither have any of the FDs I've worked with. (Although a colleague once got stuck on the way to the crem on a motorway behind a huge fatal accident, with no possible way past because of all the emergency vehicles - and this was in the days before mobile phones - he would break out in a cold sweat when telling people about it, even years after the event.)

20 October 2008 at 10:09  
Blogger Charles Cowling said...

I have to confess that my local independent FD was once late -- when the hearse broke down. One of those things. The dead man was noted for his tardiness; throughout their marriage his widow had frequently expostulated, "Tcha! You'll be late for your own funeral". Indeed he was -- and, of course, it made the day.

20 October 2008 at 11:57  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Punctuality is important, but with give or take six hundred thousand deaths in the UK each year, latent human error will dictate that there will be mistakes.
Perhaps the black and white hard line should be toned down a little to reflect real life.
The important thing is for people to care, and take care. The many people I have met across the whole range of FDs have all cared, and do their utmost to see that all runs according to plan. But mistakes will happen...
Taking a hard line black and white view risks being hoist with one's own petard when latent human error pays you a visit.
Be reasonable, establish the facts before judging, and keep things in perspective. If you have made a mistake, apologise (and compensate when appropriate), do your best to ensure that the mistake is not repeated. In these claims conscious days, we are too quick to blame and seek compensation, which immediately puts parties into adversarial positions.
Take care... be reasonable... apologise... forgive.

21 October 2008 at 14:40  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I agree with James, if it be he..Our business is subject to the whims of fate as any; cars break down, people make mistakes, shit happens. It is how we respond to these mistakes that distinguish as much in life as at work. I have never been late for a funeral but I have every sympathy for anyone who has been for any other reasons other than their own incompetence. There but for the grace of god. We are inclined in the funeral world to turn on each other like overcrowded chickens. Lets face it, it doesn't take much to rouse the mob with their blazing torches. There are easier ways to make a living, at least there was until capitalism ate itself.

23 October 2008 at 18:38  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I BURRIED MY FATHER-INLAW A WEEK AGO AND SADLY WENT WITH THE CO-OP. THEY ARRIVED IN THE CAR TO PICK US UP 20 MIN LATE.THE GIRL DRIVING THE CAR SAID DONT WORRY I HAVE ADVISED THE PARLOUR THAT YOU ARE RUNNING LATE. I WAS FUMING I SAID TO HER YOU ARE RUNNING LATE NOT ME. THERE WAS NO APOLIGY SHE JUST SAID I GOT LOST BARING IN MIND I LIVE ABOUT 5 MIN FROM THE PARLOUR.

20 January 2009 at 18:46  

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home