Worst Company In America: Verizon VS Sprint
Which phone giant will taste your fury? Did FiOS burn down your house? Did Sprint's wandering CEO step on your toes?
It's #20 Sprint VS #13 Verizon.
This is a post in our Worst Company In America 2009 series. The companies nominated for this honor were chosen by you, the readers, and seeded according to number of nominations. Keep track of all the goings on at consumerist.com/tag/worst-company-in-america. Download the bracket here.
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Many of my friends who have Sprint have dropped calls, poor customer service, or both. Verizon customers typically don't have these pesky issues here.
I was chatting on the phone to one of my friends who's a Sprint customer a few days ago, and I could barely hear her... she had to hang up for fear that her call would be dropped. Yet she stays with Sprint for the $99/month unlimited everything. She uses her smartphone for work... which reminds me, what good is a smartphone if you can't use it?
I had an issue with Verizon DSL some years ago. They oversubscribed the local DSLAM and didn't give it enough bandwidth, so every evening when enough people came home and started using it, the service would slow to a crawl. It took *three months* for an engineer to acknowledge the problem.
Switched to cable internet and never looked back.
I voted for Sprint because they can't even seem to get what little they are doing done right. Verizon, as large and widespread as they are, sells decent phones and leaves you alone as long as you don't cause problems. And every time I've needed to get something fixed on my plan, I've been able to get a good CSR, even though it takes a long time and repeated tries. Eventually, when I do get a person, it gets resolved.
I easily voted for Sprint. However, as an Alltel customer the last two years, I'll soon learn about Verizon. Alltel is almost as bad as Sprint, in terms of sneaky sales practices and bad customer service, so we'll see which way the company gets pulled now that Alltel and Verizon are one company making really big promises about future products and services.
Ugh, I DESPISE Verizon. They came to set up out business DSL line about 5 years ago. They made an installation error and now every time we receive or send a fax our internet gets cut off for 2 minutes. We've called them several times about this but they refuse to fix it. They did sent a technician a couple of times but they did absolutely nothing. Every time we call now they say there's nothing wrong.
Sprint on the other hand has been fantastic to me with the SERO plan. Customer service has been great - they recently refunded a late charge on my bill just because I asked.
@rhpot1991: How did you set up your tether? I have sero too but haven't been able to get this one figured out?
This is a hard matchup for me. I have Verizon Wireless and have been with them for years with no troubles or problems whatsoever. I get service in a lot of places where no one else does (D.C.'s Metro for example) and I'm generally happy.
However, Verizon's home phone service gave me nothing but trouble for three years while I had to use them and their monopoly just to get a phone to my home (I had dial-up internet, or I might have passed entirely). And I've heard precious little that is good to say about Fios.
But then there's Sprint, who have somehow bought the soul of my workplace and I'm constantly being told I should hawk their service to unsuspecting customers for things, not to mention that the system rarely works as advertised.
I can't say I like either company, really. But I went with Sprint this time.
Verizon scares me because they can't seem to do math..
Also they put an ETF on my dad's old "contract" with them after it had expired and he didn't get a new phone.. It's still on his credit report.
It makes me angry because an ETF is supposed to cover the subsidy of a new phone with a discount.. but if there was no new phone there should be no need whatsoever for an ETF.
Verizon actively cripples features on the phones they sell so you have to pay for their subscription services. For example, they disable the navigation features on the Blackberry so you have to pay for their monthly navigation package. They cripple some of the bluetooth functions so you can't put ring tones on your phone, so you have to buy theirs.
This is an easy vote.
"Did Sprint's wandering CEO step on your toes?"
Oh, The Consumerist... You say that these commercials were horrible, but when you keep joking like this, it makes me feel bad that they're no longer on air. When you said the whole thing about looking for customers in diners and how the b&w was because he's sad, I loved watching the commercials with that in mind.
@Radi0logy: Yes I will need to use their services for a week before I can vote, fine you caught me I used the wrong word, at least I didn't say "meant to be mistaken" :)
I used to have Sprint, they didn't give me any issues other than coverage.
I have Verizon for my cell and I used to have them for a land line. I have also dealt with their business dsl tech support for various companies I've worked with. Their Cell customer service started out horrible and in my opinion, with the issues I've had, have gotten much better.
The one bill service they have (myverizon or something like that) is garbage, mainly because they have 3+ different companies trying to talk to each other when none of them seem to want to have anything to do with each other. It took 2 months for it to get set up, then when I cancelled the land line, they cancelled my onebill which meant I had to set up the auto pay again. Problem is that no one tells you that. I complained and they removed any late fees after waiting on the phone for a few hours and escalating 3 times. Verizon gets my vote for this, but the cell side seems to be improving, they're one and done in my book.
I've had Verizon for years.
Excellent reception (My old Nextel wouldn't get access anytime I was indoors).
Repair centers are often crowded but I rarely get anything other than quality tech support.
My one negative experience involved a stolen phone where the thief used it to call Bermuda ($300 worth of long distance). Verizon was able to reverse these fraudulant calls but only after 3 months and several followup calls to remove late charges/penalties.
Verizon. Right before Katrina hit, I canceled my Verizon service and paid them of (or so I thought). Katrina comes and NOLA residents are without mail service for several weeks. During this time period Verizon sends me another "final" bill for $60. I never get it. I don't have their service anymore, I have no idea Verizon is trying to bill me. Without any further attempt to contact me they charge it off as a bad debt and report it to Experian, Equifax and Trans Union. I pull one of my free credit reports and discover it. They "agree" to take my check to settle the debt and remove the charge off. The supervisor I talked to made it sound like they were doing me a big favor. A couple months later it still shows up on one of my credit reports, so I dispute it. The upshot was that it stayed on my report, but was shown as paid, with an asterisk noting that it was due to a natural disaster. I've had Sprint (Nextel) since then. They treat me like a God compared to Verizon.
@jscott73: Did you ever read "Eats, Shoots and Leaves"? I'm kind of like that, probably because my mother was an English teacher. Ignore me ;)
I've had Verizon forever and so far, am pleased with the service I've gotten. The last time I went in to the Verizon store in town, the manager spent probably an hour and a half with me tailoring my current plan to my family's needs, and finding a phone that I wanted. OTOH, my experiences with Sprint have been less than a pleasure so they got my vote right away.
From Peter S in LA Good question. These two are both pretty bad; but the vote goes to Sprint for not being able to issue a correct bill for eight months in a row. To their credit, every time I got one of these bills and called (always at least 20 minutes on the phone), the CSR du jour was always able to fix it, and in some cases, took some more off for the hassle factor. Also: recently I've been getting spam text messages, which of course I am billed for. When I called to find out how to stop this, I was told that Sprint had sold some numbers to telemarketers, and short of turning off text messages, they have no way to stop this. Nice going Sprint; you so deserve this award.
@Lucifer_Cat:
I've used both companies in the past and they have reprehensible customer service, but only Verizon continued to charge me for 6 months for internet service even after I had cancelled the account, moved out of the apartment, and sent them a certified letter demanding they stop billing me.






















Ohh nice matchup. Though I am tempted to vote verizon because of [xkcd.com] and because they charged me 50 bucks for a supposedly free phone [switch and bait], I think Sprint is worse. Sure Verizon has its moments, but Sprint seems to suck all around. Of the first round matchup, this is most likely to be an upset (sheer # of verizon subscribers who have a bone to pick). Lets see :)
*kicks back and grabs a drink*