
Comedian Al Murray recounts a run-in with industrial-scale stupidity: "Car insurance company rang, without having sent me a renewal letter, asking for money. Made them answer security questions." In the same vein, tell us your stories about pointless paperwork and corporate quarter-wits
( , Thu 23 Feb 2012, 12:13)
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I paid for phone insurance dutifully every month for 15 months and was told by a O2 guru when the home button broke on my iphone 4 that the home button was not covered under my phones insurance policy. I took the phone to apple and they replaced the phone after 15 minutes no quibbling no ifs or buts. What did i take from this experience? Well never to use O2 again and never to insure a phone. The money i would have saved not having insurance would have been half of my next new mobile. I hate being a fanboy for Apple but i cant argue with their customer service skillz.
( , Thu 23 Feb 2012, 19:28, 2 replies)

and despite vowing to never work for them again (management were utter cunts at every level), their bread and butter customer service is still the best.
If you had come to me, I would have told you that you should accidentally 'drop' your phone, crack the screen, call your insurers and have a sparkling new replacement bought to your door in 24hours. Physical cosmetic faults are never ever covered by insurance, only manufacturers guarantee, so your comment about insurance is irrelevant and this is why Apple resolved the fault. Your service providers' guarantee typically only lasts a year, not even the length of the contract.
Not trying to be a dick, but read the small print and you would have saved yourself a load of time, money and hassle.
( , Fri 24 Feb 2012, 9:41, closed)

The iPhone home button stopping working is a design/manufacturing fault. A well known one so Apple were in fact just doing the right thing, great service but I'd rather they spent more time getting the design right in the first place!
( , Sat 25 Feb 2012, 8:41, closed)

but the Apple shop would still be perfectly within their rights to say "not our problem, mate. You bought it from O2, take it up with them." So in this case I have to agree, credit where its due.
( , Mon 27 Feb 2012, 12:23, closed)
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