24-05-2014 11:33
24-05-2014 11:33
24-05-2014 14:09
24-05-2014 14:09
24-05-2014 20:07
The way I see it, you need to feed these things back. You don't have to complain to say that you wasn't happy the way you was delt with.
I work for o2, so i'll give you both sides of it.
I am very good at my job, I always try by best to help and even if I can't I feel really bad. I often bend the rules so much they must be made of elastic.
Me personally will help as much if the customer comes on and doesn't demand, speak down to me. If someone came on being horrible which is a lot, you won't get any help from anyone. I have had a lot of customers come on very angry but not personal just very frustrated with their issue.
Customers who think they should have what they want but when told its not possible, its automatically bad service 9 out of 10.
Most of us have heard it all and know when someone has genuaine issues and not trying to blag a new phone or get out the contract because they don't get signal at home but only discovered this 15 month later and they also use 20 hours in calls a month.
Treat the advisers with respect and even frustrated try to explain asking for help and advice and you will get somewhere most the time.
Don't get me wrong, there are some lazy hard faced people that have an issue with leaving their problems at the door when coming to work and they do need the feed back.
Just don't demand, and expect what you want is the way it is.
o2 mostly are great cmpared to every other company ive been with, the other networks are appuling apart from t-mobile, never had a problem dealing with them and i'm not saying it because i've worked for them for 14yrs.
Know one is perfect.
I hope you get your issue resolved soon anyways
Good luck
24-05-2014 20:14
24-05-2014 20:36
24-05-2014 21:03
24-05-2014 21:03
@Anonymous wrote:
Old saying, Treat people how you'd like to be treated.
Totally agree with that @Anonymous . Another old saying 'Dont shoot the messenger'
I my opinion (and years of experience) you can get much further with anything if you start off being pleasant.
I have often been known to swing into 'rottweiler mood'...but I never start off any conversation of complaint
with my angry head on.
My personal experience of O2 Customer service has been that they always go out of their way to be as
helpful as possible to me.
I honestly DON'T think that is just because I have been 'lucky'....
Veritas Numquam Perit
25-05-2014 03:36
25-05-2014 03:36
I have worked in an O2 call centre and with experience you know if a person has a genuine problem or not. Instinctively, an adviser will react to the tone of a caller and I agree totally that someone on the offensive immediately will be dealt with much less sympathetically than someone being calm and polite when stating their reason for the call. Common courtesy costs nothing but it should cut both ways.