My Indian minions
Nov. 4th, 2009 11:19 amJust spent an hour chasing down a charge from Travelocity for "insurance" (next to useless) on our upcoming trip to NYC/PA. I specifically removed the insurance when I ordered the tickets, and I remember being irritated that they were making the add-on the default, but here's $39.90 for it on AmEx...
Spent half an hour on the phone with Travelocity (really an Indian call center.) The first level attempted to deflect saying that since it had been over 30 days since booking, it was too late. The second level was very much slicker, and tried to overwhelm me with detail, the fact I had been sent an email showing the charge (buried far down in the statement), that a policy had ben issued and a number assigned (expensive operation, assigning a number!)
I told the slick gentleman I was not going to waste any more time with him since it would be faster to start a chargeback with AmEx. After I hung up, he called back and said they would reverse the charge and cancel the policy.
So naturally I went to AmEx and had that Indian call center dispute the charge. It would be foolish to believe a company that already shows it is not trustworthy. Despite their gay-positive marketing, then, Travelocity is now off the list of vendors I will use.
My Indians are better than their Indians.
Spent half an hour on the phone with Travelocity (really an Indian call center.) The first level attempted to deflect saying that since it had been over 30 days since booking, it was too late. The second level was very much slicker, and tried to overwhelm me with detail, the fact I had been sent an email showing the charge (buried far down in the statement), that a policy had ben issued and a number assigned (expensive operation, assigning a number!)
I told the slick gentleman I was not going to waste any more time with him since it would be faster to start a chargeback with AmEx. After I hung up, he called back and said they would reverse the charge and cancel the policy.
So naturally I went to AmEx and had that Indian call center dispute the charge. It would be foolish to believe a company that already shows it is not trustworthy. Despite their gay-positive marketing, then, Travelocity is now off the list of vendors I will use.
My Indians are better than their Indians.
no subject
Date: 2009-11-04 07:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-11-04 10:29 pm (UTC)My recollection is that the company insisted the mistake is never on their part, that it's always on the part of the person who agreed to the insurance and that this man's story is unique. But you keep hearing this story.
The Haggler column has actually deal with travel insurance at various times, and the writer thinks it's one of the biggest ripoffs around, in the sense that the companies that offer it have a reputation for finding ways of refusing to pay out that defy common sense.
no subject
Date: 2009-11-04 11:02 pm (UTC)And don't even get me started on medical billing ... the biggest scam of all.
no subject
Date: 2009-11-05 05:04 am (UTC)