Author Topic: Apple are not customer/student friendly  (Read 2120 times)

Offline Larry

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Apple are not customer/student friendly
« on: March 18, 2003, 11:48:00 PM »
Apple Care and the Warrantry on my ibook laptop

I bought my ibook from Computer Warehouse in Brentford UK last June, and the charger stopped working. I contacted them to buy another item, and they informed me that it was under warrantry. I rang Apple in Ireland on March 5th  and they agreed to replace the item. On March 6th a keyboard arrived from Apple Computers, however the charger did not come. Apple said they would send me the item, but on Tuesday 11th March the item had not arrived. I rang Apple and was persuaded to take an extended guarantee for the next two years at a cost of £166. I was assured that I would have the item (charger) by friday 14th March but it did not arrive. I rang them today and was told that they would put a report in. The item may not be in stock???

I am a student in university in my final year and find the conduct of Apple deplorable - I was forced to buy the item (charger) at Computer Warehouse on Thursday 13 March at a cost of £69.33 ironically made by Apple.My laptop is very important to my studies.

Apple are still to send me the replacement Charger.

They certainly are not a student friendly organisation.

Would you be able to get Apple to agree to refund my expense of £69.33 for an item that they are negligent in delivering.

Offline kelly

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Apple are not customer/student friendly
« Reply #1 on: March 18, 2003, 12:17:00 PM »
Don't know Larry.  

They might say you should just have waited.

The usual rule is to keep going up the tech support chain.

It's worked for some.

I'm sure Apple is as friendly as most multi-billion dollar corporations.
kelly
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Offline Larry

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Apple are not customer/student friendly
« Reply #2 on: March 18, 2003, 12:32:00 PM »
Yes I realise that this is a teething problem we all have to go through. Society expects us all to sit back and accept it. - After my keyboard went 2 weeks before and Apple replaced it - my appreciation of Apple had gone up, only to be let down again.
I talked on ichat to a fellow Mac user who told me he had to wait 6 weeks for an item.
A suggestion why don't you as a forum make a page to complain to Apple about waits - who knows Bill Gates might drop in to see your fancy logo!!

Offline Bruce_F

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Apple are not customer/student friendly
« Reply #3 on: March 18, 2003, 12:36:00 PM »
quote:
Originally posted by kelly:
The usual rule is to keep going up the tech support chain.

I get the best results when I explain, clearly, that I need a resolution as soon as possible.

If the person on the other end doesn't come up with an idea that works, then I make some suggestions.

Sometimes, I will ask if I can talk to someone else who might have more authority.

If those things don't get results, then I just thank the person and call back, hoping the next guy will be more helpful. It usually works.    

It took two calls the other day to get Apple to agree to send me a free upgrade for TechTool that will work on my new computer. In the end, they agreed that having a version which works in OSX was the right thing to do.
-Bruce-

Offline Larry

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Apple are not customer/student friendly
« Reply #4 on: March 18, 2003, 12:46:00 PM »
That's okay - but I'm dealing with Cork in Eire (Republic of Ireland) and not US.
In USA you get great customer satisfaction.
In UK we don't

Offline beacher

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Apple are not customer/student friendly
« Reply #5 on: March 18, 2003, 01:41:00 PM »
That's not always true, Clp62. . .It really does depend on who you're dealing with.  I've had great luck with Iomega, with a very small $ consideration, but a few years ago I paid cash for a defective wood stove from Vermont Castings, and not only did I have to "eat" an almost $1,000 piece of junk, but when contacted by the Better Business Bureau, Vermont Castings lied to them about ever having heard from me, despite the fact that I had a signed receipt for a certified letter I had sent to them.

Offline Larry

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Apple are not customer/student friendly
« Reply #6 on: March 18, 2003, 02:08:00 PM »
Well I'm sorry to hear about that Beacher..... Things must have slipped. I worked in 1978 on a farm in Conneticut, and I remember visiting Hartford and being very impressed with the Customer Service. Things must have slipped.....but at least the down turn in business confidence that you're experiencing....will be temporally be masked by the war...

Offline taliesin

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Apple are not customer/student friendly
« Reply #7 on: March 18, 2003, 02:44:00 PM »
This is a topic regrettably close to my heart, particularly since if you think you're calling Apple assistance in France, you often find that you're talking to somebody in Cork who'd be only too happy for you to speak English anyway. You can also find yourself being asked to hold, several times, and being flung back and forth from people in one country to another without knowing it unless you ask...
For such reasons, I've largely given up making such calls from home.
kelly's right about going up the chain, while   beacher 's not alone in reminding us it can be just as bad in the United States: such tales know no borders.
A good perfidious stunt to pull, whether you work in the media or not, is to find out the name of the person in charge of media relations and/or marketing. This can easily be obtained from vendors, who know. Then you call that person directly and make the appropriate veiled threats regarding the lack of service and the company's reputation. This can often shift mountains. I'm afraid I've infrequently but successfully resorted to it when dealing with firms apart from Apple too.
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