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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Fair enough, but
something is telling me you were being a bit of a douchebag here.
They were a bit naughty, but at the same time, you didn't do it right either.
I can't see any corporate stupidity there, anyway.
( , Thu 1 Mar 2012, 9:10, 1 reply)
something is telling me you were being a bit of a douchebag here.
They were a bit naughty, but at the same time, you didn't do it right either.
I can't see any corporate stupidity there, anyway.
( , Thu 1 Mar 2012, 9:10, 1 reply)
The stupidity
is in the fact that their automated system was telling me different things to their humans, and when they were confronted with the problem they decided to pay a huge bank fee on top of the amount in dispute rather than make a full refund or make me an offer (I'd have taken 1 month's refund).
The thing is, I did do it right. When they wrote to me saying that they were cancelling my membership unless I gave updated payment details they were creating a new agreement to cancel the membership, completely in line with their terms of service, one I chose to take up.
( , Thu 1 Mar 2012, 9:15, closed)
is in the fact that their automated system was telling me different things to their humans, and when they were confronted with the problem they decided to pay a huge bank fee on top of the amount in dispute rather than make a full refund or make me an offer (I'd have taken 1 month's refund).
The thing is, I did do it right. When they wrote to me saying that they were cancelling my membership unless I gave updated payment details they were creating a new agreement to cancel the membership, completely in line with their terms of service, one I chose to take up.
( , Thu 1 Mar 2012, 9:15, closed)
No, not really.
You're just a nuisance. You said yourself, you didn't cancel it.
They took the cheapest option.
Well done anyway. A noble fight, valiantly won.
( , Thu 1 Mar 2012, 9:19, closed)
You're just a nuisance. You said yourself, you didn't cancel it.
They took the cheapest option.
Well done anyway. A noble fight, valiantly won.
( , Thu 1 Mar 2012, 9:19, closed)
I didn't cancel it because I got an easier offer, if you have the choice of "Call this phone number at £1.80/minute" (again, I wasn't in the country at the time) or "Do nothing" to cancel, both perfectly within the rules, what would you do? If they'd sent me an email saying "You owe us £15 and your card details have changed so we can't take it" they'd have got paid and I'd have cancelled it over the phone, fact is they offered me a way out.
As for it being the cheapest option, no, they could have just done the refund and saved themselves a hundred or so quid.
I see where you're coming from about it being a dick thing to do, and if I had done it deliberately to get out of the contract or if I'd done it just to piss them off and waste their time, sure. What actually happened is they made it deliberately inconvenient to cancel, then worded their reminder email in such a way that I was technically in the right. The best kind of in the right.
( , Thu 1 Mar 2012, 9:27, closed)
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