Why Small Businesses Rarely Get the Benefit of the Doubt
There’s an interesting double standard in today's marketplace.
When a small business makes a minor mistake, it can sometimes feel like it's the end of the world. A missed phone call, a delayed response, or a simple misunderstanding can lead to negative reviews, public complaints, and lost business. A quick one-star review or a comment like, "I'd give this business negative stars if I could," can sometimes do more damage than the original mistake itself. Yet many of those same consumers continue to support large corporations despite repeated frustrations.
Think about companies like Uber. How many people have experienced surge pricing, late drivers, canceled rides or app glitches? Yet millions continue to use the service every day.
Consider McDonald's. Customers regularly encounter incorrect orders, long drive-thru lines and/or inconsistent service, but the golden arches remain packed.
Or Walmart. Shoppers often deal with long checkout lines, out-of-stock items, and customer service challenges, yet they return week after week. You'll have no problem ringing your own purchases in because it's more profitable to be understaffed.
Why? Because consumers have come to expect that large companies are imperfect. Their mistakes are viewed as part of doing business at scale.
Small businesses, however, often don't receive the same grace. Customers frequently hold them to a higher standard because every interaction feels personal.
The reality is that most small business owners care deeply about their customers. They're not backed by massive call centers, billion-dollar budgets, or thousands of employees. They're real people trying to provide great service while balancing the countless responsibilities that come with running a business.
Mistakes happen in every business...large or small. The difference is that when a small business makes one, there’s usually a person on the other end genuinely working to make it right. They'll think about how things went wrong days, months or even years after it happened.
I remember in 2000, I had just started working with my brother and he went away. I was all by myself. I didn't even know how to drive a limo. We missed getting coverage for 1 job and I'll never forget it, the guys name and how bad I felt because I couldn't find Eastern Ave in Lynn. For some reason I could not find it on the Map Book. There was no GPS back then. More than 25 years later, I still think about that day.
Most small business owners aren't asking for perfection from their customers. They're simply asking for the same understanding that people routinely give to billion-dollar corporations.
Perhaps that's something worth remembering the next time a local business falls short. Sometimes, the companies that deserve the most patience are the ones working the hardest to earn your trust.