cuenta
4 TopicsNew billing policy
How is it that the FCC would allow T-mobile to start up-charging their customers if they're using a credit card which provides certain protections against fraud? T-mobile allowed my information to be compromised a year ago and I'm still dealing with the issues every day in the form of scam calls, texts and emails. But now T-mobile wants access to my bank account???!!! Definitely considering changing carriers. That is the most absurd business decision they have made. I believe everyone that had their information stolen because of T-mobile's lack of security should pursue legal action against the company! Defnitely a class action lawsuit viable for their lack of privacy protection and lack of response to the issues experienced by those who were the true victims in this matter.116Visto0likes3ComentariosHad the best customer service
I've been tearing t-mobile customer service a new a**hole for the past few days ever since I received an erroneous charge after I had cancelled my service. I have been demanding a refund angrily for the past few days and the best I was met with was a half hearted submission for a refund request that I was continually told would be resolved in 24 hours or 3-5 business days or whatever that never seemed to be resolved. I was convinced t-mobile was abusing some kind of billing policy or my cancellation was incorrectly documented and believed that if I didn't fight for my refund that it would never materialize. The truth is that's only slightly the case. After several calls that went nowhere I was out of patience. I committed to continually calling in and wasting as much of t-mobile's labor time as possible in my quest for a refund. After calling in today for the second time and requesting a manager and then requesting that manager's manager I was placed on the line with Kennedy. The tenor of the conversation started out adversarial as it was my expectation that he would prove to be another in a long line of call center reps that would only pretend to help me, and I suppose it was his expectation that I would be a very hostile customer based on my long history of calls over the past few days. Once he started explaining the billing policy in fine detail and I was given opportunity to ask questions about it and have them answered accurately the tension deflated. I had the issue at hand explained to me and had it acknowledged that my erroneous billing didn't quite make sense from a customer's perspective but due to safeguards built into the back end of the billing system my money could not be returned until one month after the end of my final billing cycle. He went on to explain to me how a pending charge had delayed my cancellation and moved the final cycle later than I had expected. He recognized that my account being handled like this didn't make sense on the surface, but went on to explain some of the complications that have to be accounted for within customers' accounts. These complications (promotions, device payment plans, etc.) did not apply to my account, but nonetheless the safeguards are applied unilaterally. I just want to shout out the guy for taking the time to actually defuse the hostile situation and even though I spent a good chunk of time on the phone with him he probably has saved t-mobile money and time because if not for him I would've continued calling in and being a pill. The absolute highest standard of customer service makes you walk away with a new perspective on how to handle these seemingly ridiculous situations that arise from modern billing practices, and remind you that the guy on the other end of phone sometimes genuinely wants to help you. As of yet my money is still to be returned, but Kennedy alleviated the feeling of being cheated and abused by an indifferent mega corporation. T-mobile could certainly stand to update its policies and better train their employees, but that's beyond my control. The only thing I can do is bring to their attention and exemplary employee who saved us all time by just bothering to lay out what was going wrong. @HeavenM I read somewhere else that if I brought this to your attention that you'd get my feedback to where it belonged. Please tell me if you need any more information to identify this employee. Didn't want to leave his ID number on a public forum, but if you need it to recognize him I'd happily get it to you. I'm planning on including it in a dm to the social media team. When I asked where it would be best to leave feedback for him he told me twitter but I wanted to hedge my bets since I'm not sure if I can even log in to my twitter after such a long time. And I'm absolutely not going to be giving out my phone number to make a new account. I hope this guy gets some reward for being so helpful. I know that businesses run their call centers ruthlessly and that taking so much of his time probably hurt him in regards to whatever efficiency metric is used to rate performance. Which it shouldn't since to reiterate had he not explained to me I would have continued calling in to complain and probably would have wasted way way more company time.85Visto1like0ComentariosWhy is Sprint charging my deactivated account?
I have moved to Canada where Sprint is not available, and switched carriers ages ago. I don't have the SIM card or really any of the security crap they would like me to have when I call them. I finally had the right to deactivate my account in "my sprint" after Tmobile acquired them. At the time I paid off the $60 bill remaining on my account and assumed i was done with them. Today my parents found a letter from a collector looking for $130. I check my account and sure enough they have been billing me since October, and up to May when my USA bank account was finally closed. An someone please tell me what I'm missing here? Why have I been getting charged for months on a dead account?73Visto0likes0Comentarioscan someone explain call logs/ timezones
I spend most of my time between San Francisco and Chicago however my phone/ utility bill address is New York. I can't make sense of my calls. I read online that text and data are default to PST for TMobile but I don't think that's the case with calls as if that's the case my bill shows me receiving work calls at 12am EST when I know the latest I accept is Approx 10pm. Does anyone know the answer to this? I'd have assumed it defaulted to the time zone you made the call in but who knows. I've to submit my work expenses calls and I've no idea where to start.602Visto0likes0Comentarios