I did, though, enjoy these words offered to Business Insider by Starbucks: «We expect 10 percent of the US customer's
average customer ticket to increase by about 0.5 percent as a result of these beverage adjustments.»
Not exact matches
We all know that closed
tickets,
average response times, and total answered emails don't necessarily correspond to superb
customer support.
(
Customers currently pay an
average $ 63 in taxes on a typical $ 300
ticket.)
So just give us a sense on — I mean if you don't mind revisiting it specifically on this promotion of how that
average ticket at Olive Garden can go up given the fact that you and the
customers seem to both agree that it has gotten a little bit expensive.
For example, if your goal is to make your
customer support reps more knowledgeable and efficient in solving support
tickets, you may want to correlate the completion rates to the
average number of exchanges required before a
ticket is marked as resolved.
Those
customers are spending on
average $ 13 on popcorn and soda, which is more than double the norm, because they're not shelling out money for their
ticket.»