Tightwads
There's saving money, and there's being tight: saving money at the expense of other people, or simply for the miserly hell of it.
Tell us about measures that go beyond simple belt tightening into the realms of Mr Scrooge.
( , Thu 23 Oct 2008, 13:58)
There's saving money, and there's being tight: saving money at the expense of other people, or simply for the miserly hell of it.
Tell us about measures that go beyond simple belt tightening into the realms of Mr Scrooge.
( , Thu 23 Oct 2008, 13:58)
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corporate 'tightwads'
HSBC-as a student the tight cunts wouldnt offer me an extension on my overdraft, and they charge really unfair amounts...eg. for going a little over your overdraft, they charge you 75quid..
Talktalk- signed up and sent me a router which took ages to get to me for a start, then I wanted a little bit of help settng it up and they told me i had to pay an extra 40odd quid or summat for 'geek squad' support because there not trained to deal with that...
( , Thu 23 Oct 2008, 19:20, 1 reply)
HSBC-as a student the tight cunts wouldnt offer me an extension on my overdraft, and they charge really unfair amounts...eg. for going a little over your overdraft, they charge you 75quid..
Talktalk- signed up and sent me a router which took ages to get to me for a start, then I wanted a little bit of help settng it up and they told me i had to pay an extra 40odd quid or summat for 'geek squad' support because there not trained to deal with that...
( , Thu 23 Oct 2008, 19:20, 1 reply)
HSBC are incredibly tight.
I spend a few months working for them part-time when I was in university. I started off working from nine until half past five with an hour for lunch.
After a few weeks of this I was told by my manager that head office had been checking the computer logs and noticed that there weren't many customers coming in later in the afternoon. So they made me finish at half past three every day from then on.
£25 a week that saved them, which is fair enough seeing as they only just managed to scrape together a profit of £7.1 billion that year.
That £25 probably meant that some of the executives could afford to give their children two portions of gruel a day rather than one. I feel happy that my little sacrifice could give a little bit of help to those in need.
( , Fri 24 Oct 2008, 0:57, closed)
I spend a few months working for them part-time when I was in university. I started off working from nine until half past five with an hour for lunch.
After a few weeks of this I was told by my manager that head office had been checking the computer logs and noticed that there weren't many customers coming in later in the afternoon. So they made me finish at half past three every day from then on.
£25 a week that saved them, which is fair enough seeing as they only just managed to scrape together a profit of £7.1 billion that year.
That £25 probably meant that some of the executives could afford to give their children two portions of gruel a day rather than one. I feel happy that my little sacrifice could give a little bit of help to those in need.
( , Fri 24 Oct 2008, 0:57, closed)
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