The listening gap: Why the future of production print service is built on what customers don’t say
When every original equipment manufacturer in the managed print market sells the same technology, that technology cannot be the differentiator. Service can.
But the most important thing about service is not a faster response time, a better diagnostic, or a smarter algorithm. It is the ability to understand what a customer needs before they have found the words to say it.
A contradiction worth sitting with
Earlier this year, Altron Document Solutions believed our team understood our largest customers. SLA performance was green. Response times were shorter. Productivity was up. By every metric we used to measure ourselves, we were performing well. Yet, the conversations with decision-makers felt different from the conversations with operations teams. The numbers said one thing; the relationships said another.
That contradiction forced us to ask a question we do not ask often enough: when a customer says they want X, are we sure X is what they are actually looking for?
The wish list problem in managed print services
A customer gave us a wish list with ten very specific deliverables. "Deliver every month, and we will be very happy." So we delivered: all ten items, on time, every month. The reports were exactly what they had asked for. The operational team was satisfied. But through deeper conversations, we came to understand that the wish list was only scratching the surface. Beneath those ten items was an outcome the customer had not fully articulated and arguably could not have, at the time they wrote the brief.
What they really wanted was:
None of that was on the list. In reality, it was the only thing that mattered.
Why the gap between stated and actual needs exists
Research from Harvard Business School suggests that up to 95% of customer decision-making happens below conscious thought. Customers describe their needs by referencing what they currently experience. They can articulate improvements to what they already know but cannot easily articulate an outcome that does not yet exist in their world.
Henry Ford framed it a century ago: had he asked customers what they wanted, they would have asked for a faster horse.
The point is not that customers are wrong. It is that the language available to them to describe the world they have, not the world they want.
The job of a service partner is to translate, to listen for the outcome inside the requirement, and to recognise that a request for a faster horse is almost always a request for a fundamentally different relationship.
How Altron Document Solutions is closing the gap
We have restructured how our services teams approach customer conversations around three core practices.
1. Ask why, not what. When a customer gives us a list of requirements, we treat it as a starting point, not a destination. We ask why each item matters, and we ask it more than once. By the third "why," the conversation has almost always shifted from feature to outcome: from "we need this report monthly" to "we need to walk into our quarterly review knowing the numbers will hold up to scrutiny."
2. Observe, don't just ask. Our teams are trained to watch how customers actually use our services. If an operator has built a manual workaround for something the system should be doing, that workaround is an unarticulated need. The customer has normalised the problem. Our job is to see past the normalisation, name it, and design it out.
3. Listen for the emotion, not just the information. When a customer says "parts take too long," we used to hear a logistics complaint. The emotion underneath is typically something else; the exposure of being in front of their own client when a machine goes down at the wrong moment. Fixing the logistics without addressing the emotion is half a solution. Fixing both is what builds a service relationship that survives a bad week.
Why this matters commercially for managed document solutions
In a market where machine specifications are increasingly comparable across OEMs, the hardware is no longer the reason a customer chooses or stays with a partner. Service is.
Service, properly understood, is not a cost line. It is the reason a customer renews, expands, and most critically, recommends you to a peer. Repositioning service therefore has direct commercial consequences:
The harder question driving every Altron Document Solutions engagement
The services playbook tells our teams what to deliver. Listening tells us what actually matters. Every meaningful service improvement we have made this year has come from the space between those two.
So before we ask a customer what they want, we ask ourselves a harder question first: What are they trying to feel?
When we get that right, we work with our customers before we start delivering to define what "very happy" looks like in both measurable and human terms, service stops being a line on the contract and starts being the reason the relationship lasts.
That is the standard Altron Document Solutions has established. It is the standard we want our customers and our partners to hold us to