I had an experience recently with a local bank branch that I thought might be relevant.
I'd heard from many friends that this branch had by far the best services (interest rates, no waiting for a teller, great perks, etc) in town. Curiously, I had also heard a lot of puzzling stories from people about how this particular branch had very complex rules for how to interact with it, and that if you didn't adhere to them, one of their tellers might slap you in the face!
Frankly, I found that rather preposterous, but to be on the safe side I did some research on all the correct forms & procedures (maybe not as much as I should have, but I really tried! The rules they published were rather complicated!) and went in to open an account. Sure enough, halfway through my interaction with my teller, he reached over the counter, told me that my application was terrible and not up to their standards and slapped me in the face! Kinda hard.
Naturally, I went to discuss the matter with a bank manager (BM) and had the following conversation:
Me: Hey, yeah, um, so I tried to open an account here, and one of your tellers slapped me in the face. Now, I recognize that maybe I didn't have all the right paperwork, but I really did try to come prepared. Is slapping people in the face really the best way for your tellers to deal with this? Maybe it would have been fine to just tell me to come back when I had all my info?
BM: Well, before we get started, you'll need to prove to me that you really were slapped in the face.
Me: Excuse me?
BM: Well, you wouldn't believe how many people come in here claiming to have been slapped in the face, but when we go back and check it turns out they were given, at best, a mild finger flick.
Me: How am I supposed to prove that?
BM: Oh! Right, well you see our lobby security cameras are all live streamed to a website. You'll just need to go find the correct time stamp and email us the URL.
Me: But...if you already have all that footage, surely you're already aware of the problem?
BM: What problem?
Me: Customers getting slapped in the face!
BM: If you think customers being slapped in the face is a problem, you'll need to present me with some hard evidence on exactly how often it happens to convince me that it's really a serious problem.
Me: So you admit that some customers are slapped in the face?
BM: Well...maybe. But I still haven't seen any hard evidence that it happens more than extremely rarely. Do you have any idea how many customers we serve? Hundreds and hundreds every week! If 1-2 get slapped in the face once in a while, that hardly seems like a problem that's worth our limited resources.
Me: Ok, hold on.
I went off and got testimonials (with URLs for the security footage) of 15-20 individuals being slapped in the face over the past several weeks and returned with that information.
Me: Here you go. See? Quite a few people are being slapped in the face.
BM: Have you checked how many of these people had all the correct paperwork? Because if people show up unprepared you can hardly blame my tellers for slapping one of them from time to time. They're only human.
Me: What do you mean? How are the tellers the victims here?
BM: Well, being a teller is very hard. You have no idea how many insufferable people they have to be patient with every day. In fact, one of our biggest concerns is that our tellers get burnt out and quit. Good tellers are very hard to find.
Me: But surely asking a small number of them to not slap customers in the face isn't unreasonable or, frankly, difficult for them?
BM: You're displaying a distinct lack of empathy for how emotionally trying their job is. You should try to be more considerate.
Me: Ok, whatever, can we get back to my set of testimonials here? Surely at least this is evidence that face slapping really is a thing?
BM: I definitely disagree. First, you need to remove all the cases in which the customer deserved to be slapped. Those don't count. Second, the number of cases here still just seems very low to me. Why should I care about such a small number of people being slapped in the face?
Me: I would have thought that any number of people being slapped in the face deserved at least some consideration? And who deserved to be slapped in the face?
BM: Not at all. As I'm sure you're aware, we're widely regarded as the very best bank in the region.
Me: Yes, that's why I came in the first place, but...
BM: And how do you think we got that way? Our efficiency depends upon maintaining the highest possible standards and expectations for how prepared our customers are when they come in for assistance. If we don't give customers feedback on the quality of their preparation, our efficiency will tank. Tellers will quit out of frustration. All that we've built will crumble. The occasional face slapping is hardly a big price to pay for keep things running as efficiently as they are.
Me: Surely it's possible to be efficient without slapping customers in the face?
BM: If you think so, you're welcome to go start your own bank branch and try. I doubt you'll succeed.
Me: This is truly baffling. I totally understand how your rather arcane rules for interacting with tellers is important, but that seems totally separate from the rudeness with which you enforce them.
BM: Not at all, they are inextricably linked. If customers start thinking they can come in here with zero preparation and expect our tellers to help them then we might as well close up show now. We've found that customers don't really respond to anything else.
Me: So...wait, you're saying that this branch is successful because your tellers slap people in the face?
BM: No! Don't put words in my mouth! But we have to maintain our quality standards somehow. Regardless, I still haven't seen any evidence that our tellers slap customers in any meaningful sense.
Me: But...all these timestamped URLs...?
BM: Those were bad customers. We don't care about them.
Me: So if I show you examples of good customers, I might convince you to at least discuss this problem?
BM: I highly doubt it. I'm quite sure our tellers only slap bad customers.
Me: But I thought you just said you hadn't seen any evidence that it happens at all?
BM: I haven't.
Me: Look, I don't want to take away all your efficiency rules, I just thought it might be nice to think about ways to slap fewer people.
BM: It's a slippery slope. Any changes we make to reduce face slapping will inevitably compromise our ability to serve our customers at the highest possible levels!
Me: I don't feel like that syllogism makes any sense...
BM: Trust me, it does! I know because we're the best and most successful bank in town.
At this point I gave up and left.