August 18, 2006

Da Comcast Letter.

Filed under: Uncategorized — Jim @ 5:16 pm

The following is the letter I sent to Comcast back on August 12th, portions of which have been redacted for obvious reasons and to protect the identities of the poor bastards who work for Comcast, each of whom was very polite, even though none of them could do a damned thing about a ten-day wait for a modem replacement.


James *********, Esq.
***** ****** Street
********, New Jersey
Telephone: (***) ***-****

August 12, 2006

Comcast Corporation
1500 Market Street
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19102-2148
Attn: President

Re: Internet Cable “Customer Service”
Account No. ******
Service Reference No. *********

Dear Sir:

“Customer service?” You must be joking.

I have been a Comcast Cable Television subscriber longer than I can remember, and I have been a Comcast Internet Cable subscriber for something approaching six years. I, therefore, clearly qualify as a “customer”.

As a “customer”, I do not think that I am receiving anything resembling “customer service” when I am told that I must wait ten days for a technician to come to my home for a service call , which service call will, in all likelihood, require a simple modem replacement.

A review of the information contained in Comcast’s file with the above reference number should show the following:

August 6, 2006

7:46 pm:: I called Comcast when, after a day or so of spotty internet service, I lost internet access completely.

The representative did the necessary troubleshooting to verify that I was completely off-line, and she noted that there did not seem to be a problem in my geographic area. She stated that a visit by a Comcast technician would be necessary, and she placed me on hold while she tried to arrange for an appointment.

A few moments later, she returned to the phone and stated that I would have to call the following morning and make the appointment myself. She provided me with the above reference number and indicated that by my referring to the reference number during my next call the problem would be identified and that and everything that had been done to that point would be available to whomever I spoke with.

August 7, 2006

9:01 am: I called Comcast and reached a representative named L***. I gave her the reference number but still had to explain the problem again. She again verified that I was completely off-line. She also confirmed that a visit by a technician would be necessary and told me that the earliest that a technician could be at my home is August 17th.

I expressed my astonishment that I would have to wait ten days for a service visit, particularly one that would likely involve only a modem replacement (I’ve had a couple in the past and I have a pretty good idea of how a dying and ultimately dead modem looks.) She stated that she would “call dispatch” too see if she could arrange for an earlier appointment (she used the term “additional quota”). She said that she would call me back as soon as she got off the phone with dispatch.

9:45 am: No call back from L****.

9:50 am: I called Comcast again and was connected with a representative named M******. He asked me what the problem was and I indicated that all the information should be in the reference document, but I explained much of it yet again, including L***’s failure to call me back as promised. I explained that I needed to find out if an earlier appointment was possible, possibly for that day, because, if not, I had to go to my office to work.

9:55 am: He put me on hold, and in a few minutes he returned to the phone and told me that he “just spoke with L*** who was on the phone with another customer” and that Lisa would call me back “in five or ten minutes”. I asked if he could make an appointment for a service call, and he indicated that the first person I spoke with (the August 6th call) should have made an appointment. I explained that the person told me that she was not able to make an appointment. M****** repeated that L*** would call me back “in five or ten minutes”.

10:30 am: No call back from L***.

10:35 am: I called Comcast and was connected with a representative named J****. I explained that she was the fourth person with whom I had spoken that morning (including one person who failed twice to make a promised phone call), and it would be the fourth time I explained the problem. I stated again that I was trying to arrange for an appointment with a service technician – hopefully an appointment that would occur sooner than in ten days.

10:40 am: J**** placed me on hold and returned a few minutes later with an “Online Supervisor” named H**. I reviewed the facts for the fifth time and stated that I what I really needed at this point is someone to make an appointment for a service call, preferably one sooner than ten days away!

H** put me on hold while he called the “local office” about an appointment.

H** returned to the phone and confirmed that the earliest available appointment was for August 17th. When I again expressed my astonishment that the earliest possible appointment was ten days in the future, he noted that it did seem like an unusually long wait and asked if I would like to reserve the date. Having absolutely no other choice, I booked the date.

August 8, 2006

2:35 pm: More aggravated than ever, I decided to call the “local office,” which is listed as being the office to call for repairs and which happens to be located in the town in which I live.

I spoke with a representative named A****. I gave A**** the reference number and again explained the problem. I told him that I was calling the number listed for “repairs” because I wanted someone to absolutely confirm to me that the next possible date that a technician could come to my home was August 17th. A**** confirmed that there were no earlier dates available.

A**** suggested that I try disconnecting the modem and bring it to the “payment center” for an exchange. However, he could not confirm that the people in the “payment center” customarily exchange modems, or that they would exchange mine. He agreed that, absent any assurances from Comcast that the modem would be replaced, it might well be a waste of my time to try that.

I think the foregoing speaks for itself, and it speaks volumes.

Quite simply, when it comes to customer service, Comcast richly deserves a failing grade.

Very truly yours,

James ********

[Note: The original looked nicer with Word formatting, which I am incapable of duplicating here. I also added a couple commas, which were not included in the original — errors, no doubt, born of burning rage.]

17 Comments »

  1. That’s gonna leave a mark.

    Comment by Craig — August 18, 2006 @ 6:46 pm

  2. To me, it sort of has that great “right before Pesci kicks the living crap outta the guy” quality to it. (You think it’s FUNNY I have to wait 10 days? I amuse you? Is dat it? I’m FUNNY to you? Funny in what way?)

    Comment by dogette — August 18, 2006 @ 7:41 pm

  3. Jim,

    Why do you think these cable companies have their panties all in a bind over Verizon entering the cable TV market? A little competition might help.

    Jerry K

    Comment by Jerry K — August 18, 2006 @ 9:18 pm

  4. Sic ’em Jim…I hate crappy customer service!!!

    Comment by Lisa W. — August 18, 2006 @ 10:22 pm

  5. Sadly this will be filed with the millions of other letters of dissatisfaction they receive and you will get absolutely nothing for it. Just be sure they don’t charge you for the 12 days you were off line for the month when your next bill comes!

    Comment by Teresa — August 18, 2006 @ 10:42 pm

  6. …. Jimbo, you got done, boy… plain and simple….

    Comment by Eric — August 18, 2006 @ 10:52 pm

  7. Maybe you should find some friendly shareholders and get your letter entered as a ballot item for the next annual meeting. Just add a question like “Shall the Board of Directors be required to defenestrate themselves in embarassment over the comapany’s complete lack of customer focus?”

    Bet you get 20% “Ayes” on the proxy…

    Comment by Ken Adams — August 18, 2006 @ 11:21 pm

  8. What? You got service from Comcast. The same kind a cow gets from a bull….

    Comment by DMerriman — August 19, 2006 @ 12:11 am

  9. Dish TV Customer (Dis)Service…

    We recently had some problems with our Dish TV setup. Several channels refused to come in claiming satellite signal loss. Some were totally out and some would come back at certain times of the day. I called Dish TV’s customer service number and s…

    Trackback by Bit Decay — August 19, 2006 @ 12:15 pm

  10. Jim,

    If it matters to you (and I don’t see why it really should), you forgot to block our Lisa’s name in the 9:55 entry. Seems she’s one of the failures in the group, so I wouldn’t blame you just to leave it there.

    Just thought I’d let you know.

    By the way, I ALWAYS get good service with my DSL carrier.

    RWR
    http://www.rightwingrocker.com

    Comment by RightWingRocker — August 19, 2006 @ 3:41 pm

  11. Comcast sucks rotten eggs. Time Warner is even worse.

    Comment by Libby — August 19, 2006 @ 7:55 pm

  12. Jim, we need to drink more Chocalate Vodka to relieve the stress as we did last night !!!!!

    The almost DEAD bodyguard !!!!

    Comment by Ken — August 20, 2006 @ 9:40 am

  13. I feel this same way about UPS.

    Comment by Bou — August 21, 2006 @ 8:52 am

  14. You should have told them you could get DSL service a lot quicker, and while you were at it, you might just get a satellite dish and cancel your cable TV too.

    Comment by Dan Kauffman — August 21, 2006 @ 10:35 am

  15. I’d say that I can’t count the times I’ve taken my cable modem into the payment center for an exchange, except that I can.

    See, each time I exchange it, they take the modem and give me a new subscriber box, which has a new (refurb?) modem and a set of cables. I got USB and Cat5 network cables coming outta my ears! Add up the cables, divide by two, that’s how many times I’ve swapped modems.

    On that note, my old 28.8 phone modem still works flawlessly 10 years later. What makes cable modems so fragile?

    Comment by El Capitan — August 21, 2006 @ 1:20 pm

  16. As a 3 year Comcast internet customer i’ve gone through 2 modems also – on the good side whenever i did exchange it, it was no hassle, a bit of info to the clerk, wham bam thank you ma’am never took more than 2 minutes – wait for service person to come to my house? – surely you jest – suggest thee go to a payment center and exchange it in the future

    Comment by macbedrock — August 22, 2006 @ 11:00 am

  17. Been there, done that…

    Comment by rosey — August 25, 2006 @ 10:34 pm

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