Corporate Idiocy
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)
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 had a cheque
From The Halifax once for precisely 1 penny. ( I think I still have it somewhere)(A) I have no idea why they sent it and (B) How much did it cost to send me it I wonder?
( , Thu 1 Mar 2012, 7:06, 1 reply)
From The Halifax once for precisely 1 penny. ( I think I still have it somewhere)(A) I have no idea why they sent it and (B) How much did it cost to send me it I wonder?
( , Thu 1 Mar 2012, 7:06, 1 reply)
This seems to happen quite often, it's baffling.
In 1992, I bought a flat. I applied for a mortgage with Halifax, and was turned down. Slightly gobsmacked by this, I asked them to explain why.
They didn't say much, only that I had some issues with credit, which was news to me.
Several weeks of checking later, via some dodgy rating agency, and in fact a bit of help from my bank manager, a piece of paper turned up stating that I had an unsettled outstanding with Visa, which was considered a default.
Another week or so playing phone tag with Visa reveals that my account had an outstanding balance of £0.00 on it, which for some reason their computer had decided was a debt.
Fotunately a human was able to tell their system to bugger off. A bit more work with the credit agaencies and the Halifax, and I got the mortgage.
Awful lot of work for a non existent debt that I had no idea about though.
( , Thu 1 Mar 2012, 8:35, closed)
In 1992, I bought a flat. I applied for a mortgage with Halifax, and was turned down. Slightly gobsmacked by this, I asked them to explain why.
They didn't say much, only that I had some issues with credit, which was news to me.
Several weeks of checking later, via some dodgy rating agency, and in fact a bit of help from my bank manager, a piece of paper turned up stating that I had an unsettled outstanding with Visa, which was considered a default.
Another week or so playing phone tag with Visa reveals that my account had an outstanding balance of £0.00 on it, which for some reason their computer had decided was a debt.
Fotunately a human was able to tell their system to bugger off. A bit more work with the credit agaencies and the Halifax, and I got the mortgage.
Awful lot of work for a non existent debt that I had no idea about though.
( , Thu 1 Mar 2012, 8:35, closed)
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