It’s been a (deservedly) bad month for Wells Fargo, what with the bank being ordered to pay $185 million in penalties because employees opened millions of bogus accounts, not to mention the ongoing Justice Department investigation. It would seem like a prime time for the competition to pile on the misery and steal away customers, but the CEO of U.S. Bank is demanding his staff not give into that temptation. [More]
new customers
![Skip Nyegard](../../consumermediallc.files.wordpress.com/2016/09/15553191456_2de0fdde6e_k-e1474053193198.jpg?w=300&h=225&crop=1)
U.S. Bank CEO Warns Employees: Make Fun Of Wells Fargo And You’re Fired
![Sorry, Current Equipment Is Only For New FiOS Customers](../../consumermediallc.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/fiosbad2.jpg?w=240&h=192&crop=1)
Sorry, Current Equipment Is Only For New FiOS Customers
Marvin is experiencing a very modern problem, one that our great-grandparents would probably be unable to wrap their brains around. His new video baby monitor for his new baby doesn’t get along with his Verizon FiOS-issued wireless router. They use the same frequency. That means that when his baby goes to bed, so do his Internet speeds. There’s a potential solution to this issue: get a newer router that operates on a different frequency. Verizon has them in stock, but not for Marvin. They’re only for new customers, not for him. His best option right now: to pay $130 to upgrade to one of the new routers. Which he still won’t own. [More]
![Customer Service Is Bad Because You Already Said Yes](../../consumermediallc.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/083110-003-customer-service-banner.jpg?w=300&h=225&crop=1)
Customer Service Is Bad Because You Already Said Yes
In this week’s New Yorker, James Surowiecki takes a brief look at customer service in America these days, and offers up some theories to explain why it sucks. Most of it is stuff you’ve probably already seen: it’s a cost center and therefore an attractive target when cutting expenses; bargain pricing makes it impossible; current attempts to make it more “efficient” just make it worse. But the real problem, he says, is that maybe companies are too concerned with the customers they don’t have. [More]