15-02-2024 10:34
Having been a customer service trainer, I suspect the answer is obvious. However, here goes! Why is it so difficult to ask for any type of refund. There seems to be no simple, direct, one/two click solution on the O2 site. The chatbot is far too limited/narrow on its options/responses - I tried!
It should take minimal effort to create a 3 or 4 window webform and load it to a CONSPICUOUS place on the front page: A/C No & customer name; nature of refund; amount claimed; reason. "SIMPLES!" as the meerkat says..
15-02-2024 10:44 - edited 15-02-2024 10:46
15-02-2024 10:44 - edited 15-02-2024 10:46
You just need to call o2 on 0800 902 0217 and they can process the refund for you, if one is due..
These things are more complicated than just a webform, it needs to be encrypted, put into a format a CRM and Finance team can accept and access, then pull through your details, then it needs to be decided if a refund is due or not... so quicker to speak to someone
15-02-2024 10:55
15-02-2024 10:55
Thanks madasaf1sh
I have helped design these systems and so many organisations use them. They are NOT as complicated as you suggest. All the back office processes you mention are readily available and in use by many other organisations. AND I tried the phone AND the chatbot - unsuccessfully.
15-02-2024 11:30
15-02-2024 11:30
@Rob_B O2 are in the process of moving everybody to a new CRM. The fact they aren't there after nearly two years speaks volumes.
Looks like there maybe a job opportunity
15-02-2024 11:39
15-02-2024 11:39
O2 are the market leaders in making the easiest of things as complicated as possible.
15-02-2024 11:41
15-02-2024 11:41
That explains a lot… as for the job: thanks but no thanks… software PMs have turned ‘a complex issue that only we can solve’ into an art form. Why fís a problem or upload a system that actually is fit for purpose from day 1 when you’ve got a lucrative maintenance contract?
16-02-2024 18:17
16-02-2024 18:17
I suspect that fear of fraud is one reason that O2 have not implemented something along the lines of your suggestion.
Cost will be the other reason. A tiny proportion of O2's customers probably ever claim a refund, so the view is probably that the funds are better off spent on the network, customer service, executive pay or dividends for shareholders.