Posted on 10/13/2011 1:50:26 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
The worst companies include big banks, legacy airlines and utilities.No media spin or agenda there, nosiree.
How’s the satisfaction of these worst companies versus the satisfaction with Congress? Or Zero as POTUS?
Thanks Wuli, good idea.
Thank you
Customers phoning "customer service" are greeted cheerfully by programmed robots who talk in a sing-song voice and are stationed somewhere in India, Taiwan, Grand Fenwick or Upper Slabovia. They have difficulty dealing with all but the most simplified requests. If they can't answer and you ask for an American (which is your right) or for a supervisor you get placed on indefinite hold. They never come back, ever.
In which case, when you try re-dialing again you get a different robotic foreigner, you have to repeat your request in detail again and your whole thing has to start from scratch....with the same results unless you get lucky.
Tip....instead of phoning the Sears (alias KMart) national customer service number try your local Sears repair dispatch center if you can find its number in your phone book.
If you have a home appliance repair, talk to your repair guys and after some prodding, they'll tell you about the absolute and almost incomprehensible amount of complaints flooding Sears (really KMart) nationwide about their appliance customer service. They shake their head, they are disgusted also, but powerless to do anything.
Actually, there's little problem with the guys who do the actual repair....they're good at what they do and have good attitudes. For the sake of brevity, the real problem in dealing with Sears (owned by KMart) "service" lies in anything to do with the telephone...and I need say no more.
If you talk to Sears retirees, they'll shake their heads in sadness for what Sears (aka KMart) has become over the past decades. They'll tell you the problem started when the decisions and instincts of middle-west-based REAL MERCHANDISERS (medium management, store managers, buyers, etc.) who loved their company and who built it up for over the century into a merchandising behemoth were replaced by the anonymous financial SUITS in New York and elsewhere. These money "experts" began making the final merchandising decisions....and they failed and still are failing miserably.
They care for the bottom line only......and customer service be damned.
I could go on about Sears retail stores as an aside, but everyone has his or her experiences. In my mall, jewelry, gifts and cosmetics disappeared many years ago. Shoes and other square-footage merchandising spaces are leased out to other entities.
Just try to find a clerk on the floor anymore (except in tools, outdoor stuff and appliances) to help you find something.
You need assistance in curtains? Forget it, the only visible clerk "can't leave my check-out station".
Give me a break.
Wait till the commie in the White House drives all local shop owners out of business....and the sad vestiges of what used to be a great, iconic place to patronize remain moldering away in local malls....kept alive only by Craftsman tools, riding mowers and Fruit-of-the-Loom bath towels.
Did I forget to mention Sears is owned by KMart?
Leni
Leni
My solution for dealing with K-Mart - opps, I mean Sears - is to NOT. I buy all appliances from Home Depot or Lowes...now. It's sad, because like you I remember when Sears was a place worth shopping at... they still have the best tools for the price - and since tools don't need repair - I'm still a minor customer... who knows how long the tools will stay high quality ...
Thanks for your comments - and for sharing...
“When I was a kid, I could get 4% on a passbook savings account, debit cards hadn’t been invented, and somehow the banks managed to keep the lights on and the doors open.”
And when you did that what was the interest rate benchmarks set by the Fed Reserve and in U.S. Treasury notes?
The Fed’s cheap money, high leverage, cheap dollar policies are responsible for lower fixed interest rates on all kinds of deposits. And, that is a big reason savings/deposits grew lower as lower. The key factor in that was not “banks” policies as much as Fed policies and monetary signals from the Fed.
Personally I’ve never seen Sears as a great place. It was poor well before K-Mart took over (which BTW I thought was dying). The only thing good about it consistently was hardware, in my lifetime. They’ve been taking others’ designs and putting their stamp on it as if it was all theirs for ages. Kenmore is overrated - I’ve dealt with that several times from the houses we’ve bought. For service - find a local repair shop or in our case, BG&E is still quite good (not as good since it’s not independent anymore).
For electronics/appliances we preferred Monkey - oops Montgomery Wards. Unfortunately they died, and a decade before that had let go of electronics/etc. We had other places, too, but that was a good catch-all (not to mention my mother’s beloved local Hutzler’s).
Their Kenmore stuff was often high rated - but you’re right - it’s not much of a place to shop... Thanks for sharing.
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