Google Launches Phone Support For The Nexus One, Lowers ETF By $200
Jason Kincaid
Feb 8, 2010

Since the launch of the Nexus One, early adopters have likely had one question lurking in the back of their minds: who to take the phone to if it broke. You see, when the phone was first launched, Google was directing people to either T-Mobile (Google’s carrier partner) or HTC (the device manufacturer) depending on the problem, which could lead to an endless circle of hold times and few results. Today, Google has just rolled out its solution: it’s launching its own phone support line specifically for Nexus One customers. Call 888-48-NEXUS (63987) and within a few minutes, you’ll be talking to a real live Google support tech (the line is open from 7AM to 10PM EST).

This is, of course, a fairly major departure from Google’s standard protocol of making it incredibly difficult to reach anyone for phone support for most of its products. It doesn’t come as a total surprise though — last week there were reports of a Google job listing for “Phone Support Program Manager, Android/Nexus One” to be based out of its headquarters in Mountain View, CA.

The news was first reported at TMO News, and we’ve gotten a response from a Google spokesperson explaining the company’s logic behind the support number:

By design, we focused initially on providing the best possible customer support through our on-line channel, and our experience in the four weeks since the Nexus One launch enabled us to significantly enhance that on-line support offering. We have been able to address a large majority of customers’ inquiries successfully through on-line support, in combination with phone support from our partners, HTC and T-Mobile. That said, our approach with our new consumer channel is to learn fast and continue to improve, and we have, therefore, also been developing our capabilities to provide a number from Google, 888-48-NEXUS (63987) for live phone support for the Nexus One. Live phone support from Google, combined with an optimized on-line support experience, enables a superior Nexus One customer experience.

In other words, Google probably would have liked to have gotten away with online-only support, but it quickly became clear that wasn’t going to cut it.

In other news, Google has also announced that the early termination fee (ETF) for the phone is down to $150 from $350 (they’re actually calling it an “equipment recovery fee”). But that’s still on top of T-Mobile’s $200 fee. The drop may have well been spurred by the ETF inquiry recently launched by the FCC.

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  • http://www.sriraj.org Sriraj

    Yep, saw that Job posting a week ago and knew this was soon coming.
    There’s no way that a customer will be happy seeing the message ‘While me make every effort to answer your query with in a day, it may sometimes take up to 72hrs depending on the numbers of queries we receive’.

  • robert

    Who are you going to call?

    GHOSTBUSTERS!

  • :-O

    GOOD!

    Yes, if Google wants to join the ranks of actual consumer-focused companies, they need to begin acting like it.

    Actual customer service is not an “optional” holdover from some antiquated business model that you need not emulate…just…because…you’re Google.

    It is the standard that every consumer in the developed world now expects as a given. Not providing it will bring you the sort of FAIL that the Nexus One experienced early on.

    20,000 units in week one (one fifth of what the Palm Pre sold, to give some perspective) was a serious wakeup call for them, I expect.

  • http://www.leifandersen.net Leif Andersen

    That’s great (as far as tech support goes), I just wish they would roll it out for a few of their other products, but that’s not nearly as important as supporting their phone(s).

    Also, I still think the $150 (on top of $200) is a little high, but at least it’s not outright robbery anymore.

  • Joseph

    Well you can’t call them at 8:00pm Pacific. Closed. FAIL

  • http://www.baduku.com Namanh Hoang

    I’m glad they finally opted for some form of customer service which was inevitable. My first comments about the Nexus was always that I didn’t quite trust buying a product from a company that didn’t have an actual phone number to reach them at. Now if they can only take this customer service idea and expand it to stuff like Adsense, Adwords, and other Google Services as opposed to the current 2 week email response times. Here’s the Nexus public opinion poll currently running on our site http://www.baduku.com/topics/htc-nexus-one-by-google_240 guess we can nix no customer service number from the list of bad opinions.

  • http://www.octechnophile.com david amodt

    when they come up with a way for corporations to place orders, let me know. want to order one in my company name but google checkout isn’t that evolved yet

  • Phil

    This is all why the wireless telecomm makers have thousands of their own stores. This is why Apple opened their own retail stores. For Google to think that it could run an atoms-based business using the mindset of bit-moving is completely amateurish.

  • magnum

    Yes, Apparently, we do have a rebate before with the N1, Explaining it simpler: http://bit.ly/nexus-one-rebate-details

    Indeed it always sounds good to hear that G is constantly improving the capabilities of the nexus phone.

  • http://austang.com Austang

    Your post was great and informative but it lost all credibility the second you said “Fail”

  • http://parrottoys.org Peter Murphy

    Nothing could possibly go wrong with this plan.

  • http://ipadkeyboarddock.net Tim Young

    Pimpin’ ain’t easy.

  • http://ipadkeyboarddock.net Leif Andersen

    There can be only one.

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    myceramicwatch.org

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