feywon
Well-known Member
- Location
- Rural North Central NM
i'm not a big complainer, i'm very aware most people will complain quicker than they compliment or thank, and often they fuss at those least responsible for the problem. If i talk to store managers/owners or random strangers it is usually a positive communication. i make a point of telling 'bosses' when their employees have done a good job and/or go 'the extra mile' for me or i witness them doing it for someone who doesn't even say thank you (common when go to city, here in my village most people practice common courtesy even with service people). If i see a child doing something good and can make out who the parent is, i'll complement them on raising mannerly, helpful child as well thanking the child if they helped me. If i see a parent struggling with something i try to give encouragement.
However, there are times, especially in recent years when a well documented and thought out complaint was necessary. Tho my first real success was in 5th grade and in the early 70's i successfully fought 'Ma Bell' in NYC when they were still a monopoly. Also fought US embassy in Guyana S. America successfully.
More recently, i've had some success with 2 major companies. In one case they merely needed to inform their IT people that on last 'upgrade' of site crucial info was missing from where it had been for years on the OTC shopping page. (Humana gives many customers a Quarterly allowance which can be spent online, free shipping--some quarters i buy things that have long shelf lives to use as much of it as possible tho every quarter i'm getting my vitamins and supplements thru them also. For years one's remaining balance was displayed at top of that shopping page. Suddenly it was gone after an upgrade/update. i had to work my way thru the AI Chatbot and two live ones that might as well have been AI's attending only to key words not to qualifiers to understand my issue, before i got one that understood my issue, she promised to 'send a ticket' to IT about the problem.
In the other case, because i dropped part of what i was getting from them months ago i finished with my payment plan earlier than originally expected. But i did that months ago and they did not update the info until i took them to task about not having procedures in place to rework the numbers if the service changes. i made clear i'd worked in offices and with computers enough to know most types of businesses these days have specialized software that makes such reworking agreements easier and faster if only they have the proper processes in place to assure someone makes the corrections. i also mentioned that part of the problem might be the over compartmentalization this firm practices with few people that seem to have an overview of all of processes and that's how such things get overlooked till a customer complains. Finally got someone with some authority on the 7th, tho their first responses were incomplete. i thanked him for additional info but pointed out what was missing. Didn't even check the email i use for business communications or their 'portal' yesterday, was trying to be patient. But when i got online this morning not only did i get an email stating the info i wanted unequivocally but an overpayment of $156 had been returned to my bank account.
When you do it right it works and you don't have to feel bad about 'losing it' like some 'Karen' if you stay calm, lay out your issue and what you want of them. While it's true pitching a tantrum sometimes works (especially in a crowded place with other customers in ear shot, but i prefer staying calm and organized. i only used the raised voice threats method once with VW dealership but that's another story,
Anyone else have stories about getting action on company errors? They can be interesting, and instructive.
However, there are times, especially in recent years when a well documented and thought out complaint was necessary. Tho my first real success was in 5th grade and in the early 70's i successfully fought 'Ma Bell' in NYC when they were still a monopoly. Also fought US embassy in Guyana S. America successfully.
More recently, i've had some success with 2 major companies. In one case they merely needed to inform their IT people that on last 'upgrade' of site crucial info was missing from where it had been for years on the OTC shopping page. (Humana gives many customers a Quarterly allowance which can be spent online, free shipping--some quarters i buy things that have long shelf lives to use as much of it as possible tho every quarter i'm getting my vitamins and supplements thru them also. For years one's remaining balance was displayed at top of that shopping page. Suddenly it was gone after an upgrade/update. i had to work my way thru the AI Chatbot and two live ones that might as well have been AI's attending only to key words not to qualifiers to understand my issue, before i got one that understood my issue, she promised to 'send a ticket' to IT about the problem.
In the other case, because i dropped part of what i was getting from them months ago i finished with my payment plan earlier than originally expected. But i did that months ago and they did not update the info until i took them to task about not having procedures in place to rework the numbers if the service changes. i made clear i'd worked in offices and with computers enough to know most types of businesses these days have specialized software that makes such reworking agreements easier and faster if only they have the proper processes in place to assure someone makes the corrections. i also mentioned that part of the problem might be the over compartmentalization this firm practices with few people that seem to have an overview of all of processes and that's how such things get overlooked till a customer complains. Finally got someone with some authority on the 7th, tho their first responses were incomplete. i thanked him for additional info but pointed out what was missing. Didn't even check the email i use for business communications or their 'portal' yesterday, was trying to be patient. But when i got online this morning not only did i get an email stating the info i wanted unequivocally but an overpayment of $156 had been returned to my bank account.
When you do it right it works and you don't have to feel bad about 'losing it' like some 'Karen' if you stay calm, lay out your issue and what you want of them. While it's true pitching a tantrum sometimes works (especially in a crowded place with other customers in ear shot, but i prefer staying calm and organized. i only used the raised voice threats method once with VW dealership but that's another story,
Anyone else have stories about getting action on company errors? They can be interesting, and instructive.