Épisodes

  • The Capacity Catastrophe
    Jul 14 2026
    The Season You Saw ComingTIGTA — “The Internal Revenue Service’s Readiness for the 2026 Filing Season” (memorandum, Jan. 26, 2026: staffing down ~19,000/19% to October 2021 levels; key processing inventories at ~2.0 million items in Dec. 2025 vs. 871K pre-pandemic; phone level-of-service goal lowered to 70% from 85%; last time LOS was ≤70% was the 2022 filing season, at 18% — “fewer than one-in-five incoming calls”; Accounts Management onboarded 2,300 of 3,500 approved hires, with new hires trained only to screen calls and answer basic refund questions; $2.6B in interest paid to individuals in Processing Year 2025)Journal of Accountancy — “About a quarter of callers to two IRS lines got poor service, TIGTA says” (June 16, 2026; TIGTA June 10 report: 26% of a 200-call sample on two lines, Feb. 15–May 15, 2025, did not receive quality service; extrapolated to ~1 million of 3.8 million callers)TIGTA — “Taxpayers Continue to Experience Customer Service Issues…” (Report 2026–10–0030, June 2026 — underlying report for the above)Federal News Network — “After missing hiring goals, IRS dials back taxpayer phone assistance targets,” Jory Heckman (Jan. 2026; National Taxpayer Advocate: LOS metric covers only ~a quarter of total call volume, and the IRS exceeded the 85% LOS metric in fiscal 2024; ~35 of 360 Taxpayer Assistance Centers closed as of Dec. 2025)BCG — “How Retailers Can De-Risk the 2025 Holiday Shopping Season,” Alex Barocas and Shilpa Sharma (Sept. 17, 2025; “beautifully wrapped disappointment”; reshape the plan to demand / execute with excellence / tune and scale with agility; holiday command center)Retail Dive — “Smaller retailers face their toughest holiday season in years,” Daphne Howland (Oct. 14, 2025; Xero research: 37% of small business owners worry about Black Friday traffic, 32% about holiday inventory, 30% about burnout; Astrid Vigeland of Folly 101, Portland, Maine)Xero — U.S. Black Friday survey (media release cited by Retail Dive)The Feature: The PudderyHouston Public Media — “The Puddery in Pearland temporarily closes due to ‘Keith Lee effect’ that prompted spike in customers” (Dec. 7, 2023; one-woman show; Nov. 28, 2023 review; 9/10, “immaculate,” “absolutely insane”; lines within hours and for ~10 days; shipping suspended; urgent care visit and strained chest muscle; “Usually I would just thug it out”; closed until Saturday, Dec. 9)CultureMap Houston — “TikTok food critic Keith Lee awards $50,000 to Pearland dessert shop,” Eric Sandler (Mar. 25, 2025; Toast partnership; food trailer purchase; move to larger space in the same shopping center; best banana pudding he’s ever had)KHOU — “The Puddery owner talks life after TikTok food critic Keith Lee’s visit”Click2Houston — “Pearland dessert shop The Puddery closed for days after going viral due to ‘Keith Lee effect’” (Dec. 7, 2023)The Counterweight: Fireworks StandsFreakonomics Radio Network — The Economics of Everyday Things: “Fireworks Stands,” Zachary Crockett (Phantom Fireworks VP Alex Zoldan; ~1,500 pop-up tents; consumer fireworks = $2.2B/year; “80 percent of our entire year sales are one month”; “90 plus percent planning and 10 executing”; typical stand grosses $25K–$60K, ~20% net considered good; ~1,000 California stands run by nonprofits; six-week shipping from China, next year’s orders placed by July)Marketplace — “How much profit do fireworks stands make?”, Janet Nguyen (Dec. 2022; PyroSpot’s Craig LaFleur: 20% margin is “a great job”; BU economist Jay Zagorsky: ~3x wholesale markup; ~10 weeks full-time work plus ~6 weeks part-time prep for a seasonal stand)Company MentionedJohns & Taylor — blog and newsletter
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    22 min
  • The Forgotten Middle
    Jun 24 2026

    The Gym: Paying Not to Go

    • DellaVigna & Malmendier, “Paying Not to Go to the Gym,” American Economic Review 96(3), 2006, pp. 694–719 (members on flat monthly contracts averaged ~4.3 visits/month, >$17 per visit vs. a $10 ten-visit pass; monthly members slower to cancel than annual)
    • Full working-paper PDF (UC Berkeley)


    Loyalty Programs: The Forgotten Member

    • Bond Brand Loyalty — The Loyalty Report 2023 (U.S. consumers belong to ~18 programs, active in about half)
    • McKinsey — “Next in loyalty: Eight levers to turn customers into fans” (programs built around top-tier customers; active members spend ~10% more, redeemers ~25% more than inactive)


    The Design Principle: Perpetual Intermediates

    • Alan Cooper, About Face: The Essentials of Interaction Design — most users are “perpetual intermediates”; interfaces neglect the majority in the middle


    The Office Ribbon: Jensen Harris

    • Jensen Harris, “The Story of the Ribbon” (Microsoft Learn archive of his Office UI blog)
    • Jensen Harris, “No Distaste for Paste (Why the UI, Part 7)” — command-usage data from the Customer Experience Improvement Program (Paste ~11%; top 5 commands ~32% of all usage in Word)
    • “The Most Frequently Used Features in Microsoft Office” — summary of Harris’s Word 2003 command data
    • Harvard Business Review, “Why Microsoft Had to Destroy Word” (2009) — customers kept requesting features Office already had, just buried; the Ribbon was built to surface them


    Product Mentioned

    • Website Reality Check — Johns & Taylor Services
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    20 min
  • The Review Revolution Reversal
    Jun 17 2026

    The Research: Why Perfect Doesn’t Sell

    • Northwestern University Medill Spiegel Research Center — How Online Reviews Influence Sales (purchase likelihood peaks at 4.0–4.7 stars; “five stars is too good to be true”)
    • PowerReviews & Northwestern’s Spiegel Research Center — Five-Star Product Ratings Are “Too Good to Be True”
    • PowerReviews — How Fake Reviews Destroy Consumer Trust (only 6% of shoppers say a perfect 5.0 is ideal)


    The Trust Crisis

    • Pangram Labs — Three Percent of Front-Page Amazon Reviews Are AI-Generated
    • Bazaarvoice — Shopper Experience Index 2025 (authenticity as the top shopping frustration)


    The Law

    • FTC — Final Rule Banning Fake Reviews and Testimonials (August 2024)


    The Fashion Nova Case

    • FTC — Fashion Nova Will Pay $4.2 Million to Settle Allegations It Blocked Negative Reviews (January 2022)
    • FTC — Finalizes Order with Fashion Nova Over Blocked Reviews (March 2022)
    • FTC — Sends Refunds to Consumers Affected by Fashion Nova’s Deceptive Review Practices (January 2025)


    The Amazon Origin Story

    • Inc. — Jeff Bezos on why Amazon allowed negative reviews: “we make money when we help customers make purchase decisions” (quoting John Rossman’s Think Like Amazon)


    Product Mentioned

    • Experience Helpdesk
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    21 min
  • The Hidden Cost of Disengagement
    Jun 10 2026

    The Cost of Disengagement

    • Gallup — The World’s $8.8 Trillion Workplace Problem (State of the Global Workplace)


    Employee Experience Drives Customer Experience

    • Glassdoor Research — The Link Between Glassdoor Reviews and Customer Satisfaction (Chamberlain & Zhao)
    • Harvard Business Review — Engaged Employees Create Better Customer Experiences (April 2023)
    • Harvard Business Review Analytic Services — The Impact of Employee Engagement on Customer Experience (report PDF)


    Costco Case Study

    • CFO Dive — Costco raises minimum hourly wage to $19.50
    • Macrotrends — Costco (COST) Market Cap
    • The Motley Fool — Jim Sinegal on Costco’s “Promote From Within” Strategy
    • Yahoo Finance — Nine Out of Ten Costco Members Renew
    • A-Z Quotes — James Sinegal: “When employees are happy, they are your very best ambassadors”


    Products Mentioned

    • Experience Helpdesk
    • Website Reality Check
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    20 min
  • The True Cost of Bad Customer Experience
    May 13 2026
    What do a billion-dollar retail collapse, a broken app, and an abandoned shopping cart have in common? They’re all part of the same hidden bill, and most companies don’t realize they’re paying it until it’s too late.

    In this episode of Marginally Better, Joe Taylor, Jr. breaks down the true cost of bad customer experience. Not as isolated mistakes, but as a slow, compounding erosion of trust that quietly drains revenue, loyalty, and brand value. From JCPenney’s infamous pricing overhaul to Domino’s brutally honest turnaround, this episode reveals a simple truth: the most expensive decisions businesses make are often the ones they never test—and the ones their customers never forgive.

    Episode Links:
    • Forrester: US Customer Experience Index 2024 — A Quality Crisis
    • Fast Company - CX scores hit a low, Forrester reports
    • Sonos app redesign timeline
    • Sonos warns of app remediation costs
    • Baymard Institute - 49 Cart Abandonment Rate Statistics
    • J.C. Penney’s “Fair and Square” Pricing Strategy
    • Understanding J.C. Penney’s Risky New Pricing Strategy
    • Was Ron Johnson right?
    • NPR — His Makeover Strategy In Shambles, J.C. Penney CEO Ron Johnson Is Out
    • J.C. Penney CEO Ron Johnson out after troubled tenure
    • 5 Critical Errors That Triggered Ron Johnson’s Removal at JC Penney
    • Washington Post — J.C. Penney files for bankruptcy (May 15 2020)
    • Domino’s CEO Patrick Doyle: Tech with a side of pizza (Kai Ryssdal interview, Sep 25 2015)
    • Restaurant Business Online — How Patrick Doyle changed Domino’s, and the restaurant industry
    • J. Patrick Doyle (career summary, with cited sources)





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    24 min
  • The Repair Relationship Revolution
    Apr 29 2026
    A century ago, companies deliberately made products that wouldn’t last. Today, that model is being dismantled—by regulators, by consumers, and by a new generation of businesses built around repair, not replacement.In this episode of Marginally Better, Joe Taylor, Jr. explores the repair relationship revolution—from sweeping right-to-repair laws reshaping global manufacturing to companies like Framework and Lodge building loyalty through products designed to last. It’s a story about more than hardware—it’s about how fixing what’s broken can create stronger customer relationships than replacing what works, and why the future belongs to businesses that design for longevity, trust, and connection.Episode Links:Wikipedia — Phoebus cartelThe Great Lightbulb ConspiracyLightbulb Cartel a Dark Spot in Lighting HistoryOregon Passes Right to Repair Law: First to Ban Parts PairingOregon Legislature passes Right to Repair bill after four-year student effortOregon Legislature — SB 1596 Final Text (Chapter 69, 2024 Laws)Common rules promoting the repair of goodsIncoming EU right to repair requirements: The key things every global manufacturer should knowEuropean Parliament — Right to repair: the EU's actions to make repairs more attractiveRight to Repair Europe — The state of Right to Repair in 2026Apple Support — Self Service RepairApple to expand repair options with support for used genuine parts (April 2024)AppleInsider — Apple expands Self Service Repair to iPhone 17 lineupAppleInsider — iPhone 17e & M4 iPad Air parts now on Self Service Repair StoreThe Global E-waste Monitor 2024 (UNITAR / ITU)As electronic waste surges, countries look for answerGlobal E-waste Statistics PartnershipFramework's Series A-1 and Community ParticipationFramework raises $18m to move beyond modular laptopFramework Raises $18M In New FundingPitchBook — Framework Computer 2026 Company ProfileWikipedia — Framework ComputerPCWorld — Framework Laptop 16 reviewTechSpot — Framework Laptop 16 (2025) Pros and ConsEverything Framework Just Revealed at Its 2026 Modular Laptop EventFive Years of FrameworkLodge Cast Iron — About LodgeA Seasoned Family BusinessThe Bitter Southerner — Lodge Cast IronLodge Foundry in South Pittsburg Cooks up an American IconAfter 123 Years, Lodge Cast Iron is Still Family-OwnedLodge Manufacturing Investing $56M In South Pittsburg, TN ExpansionLodge Manufacturing Company to Expand Marion County OperationsWikipedia — Service Recovery ParadoxService Recovery Paradox: A Meta-Analysis (de Matos, Henrique, Rossi 2007)From service failure to brand loyalty: evidence of service recovery paradox (2025)
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    25 min
  • The Community Currency
    Apr 23 2026
    A productivity app on the brink of collapse rebuilt itself in a small apartment in Kyoto—and a decade later became an $11 billion company with 100 million users. What changed? Not the product alone, but the people around it.In this episode of Marginally Better, Joe Taylor, Jr. explores the rise of community as currency—why companies like Notion, Figma, and Discord are growing without massive marketing budgets, while others spend billions trying (and failing) to manufacture connection. It’s a deep dive into what real community looks like, why it can’t be forced, and how businesses can create the conditions for customers to become something more: collaborators, advocates, and builders.Episode Links:Meta burned $19 billion on VR last year, and 2026 won't be any betterMeta's Reality Labs posts $6.02 billion loss in fourth quarterMeta Plans 30% Cut to Metaverse Budget in 2026Meta Metaverse Layoffs 2026: Inside Reality Labs MeltdownThe 5 Phases of Figma's Community-Led GrowthCommunity Growth at FigmaFigma's Community Ecosystem: From Plugins to Proof PointsDiscord Statistics 2026Discord Statistics 2026: Users, Revenue & MoreBranded Discord Community Building Guide 2026LEGO Ideas Blog — 146 Product Ideas Qualify for Second 2025 ReviewLEGO Ideas Case StudyCommunity Growth at LEGONotion's lost years, its near collapse, staying small to move fast (Ivan Zhao)Ivan Zhao: "In 2015, we were weeks away from shutting down"The Kyoto Reboot: How Ivan Zhao Rebuilt NotionNotion CEO Ivan Zhao: Augmenting Human IntellectHow Notion Does Marketing: Community, Influencers & Growth PlaybooksTemplates, Creators, and Power Users: Notion's MAU FlywheelNotion Community Led Growth Case StudyHow Notion Used Community to Scale to 20M+ UsersNotion's Growth Strategy: From 0 to $10 BillionHow Notion Built the Perfect SaaS Brand Ambassador ProgramNotion at $11 Billion: A Masterclass in PatienceNotion Statistics 2026: Growth, Revenue & ImpactNotion Valuation: How a Bootstrapped Startup Hit $10 BillionSephora's Secret Sauce: Exclusive Experiences over DiscountsSephora's loyalty SVP shares tips on creating a best-in-class loyalty programSephora Loyalty: 4 Reasons It Disrupts the MarketUltimate Guide to Community-Led GrowthThe Complete Discord Marketing Strategy for 2026Ravelry — About Our SiteKnit Like Granny — Ravelry Reveals: 79+ Statistics
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    21 min