This matter came to my mind over my recent experiences with our local watch ADs.
Over the past few months, I have, together with friends/colleagues and family members, went to a few ADs for the viewing and subsequent purchases of watches. And over some friendly conversations I had with several sales execs from the various outlets, I discover that the watch companies have actually created some online data-sharing of their customers' profiles and information. It did not help that any sales staff from a watch company can know, almost immediately:
- the number of watches a customer had bought (since the creation of the system in 2014/2015);
- what type of watches were bought;
- where the watches were bought at;
- who the watches were bought from; and
- the cost of each and every purchases.
I can understand the potential need for this initiative; maybe for the sake of building up their customers' profiles so as to differentiate more distinctively who their VVIP-customers are, how much each customer has spent buying their products, which customer(s) should deserve what watch(es) to buy, who are likely 'flippers' so they can BLACKLIST, etc. But I see many potential problems to it.
Firstly, customers' information is widely shared among all staff within the company. I am not sure if the company has any NDA policy or have instructed the staff not to reveal customers' information freely. Secondly, are all staff trained to handle such information with high confidentiality (apparently not and I will share later). Thirdly, as what my subject title states, does this contravene the law on Personal Data Protection Act?
Over the past few months, I have, together with friends/colleagues and family members, went to a few ADs for the viewing and subsequent purchases of watches. And over some friendly conversations I had with several sales execs from the various outlets, I discover that the watch companies have actually created some online data-sharing of their customers' profiles and information. It did not help that any sales staff from a watch company can know, almost immediately:
- the number of watches a customer had bought (since the creation of the system in 2014/2015);
- what type of watches were bought;
- where the watches were bought at;
- who the watches were bought from; and
- the cost of each and every purchases.
I can understand the potential need for this initiative; maybe for the sake of building up their customers' profiles so as to differentiate more distinctively who their VVIP-customers are, how much each customer has spent buying their products, which customer(s) should deserve what watch(es) to buy, who are likely 'flippers' so they can BLACKLIST, etc. But I see many potential problems to it.
Firstly, customers' information is widely shared among all staff within the company. I am not sure if the company has any NDA policy or have instructed the staff not to reveal customers' information freely. Secondly, are all staff trained to handle such information with high confidentiality (apparently not and I will share later). Thirdly, as what my subject title states, does this contravene the law on Personal Data Protection Act?
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