The Columbus Dispatch

Trading apps add live help support

- Stan Choe

NEW YORK – It’s one of the downsides of apps that make things like ordering food or buying stocks and cryptocurr­encies easier: What happens when something goes wrong?

It’s often a frustratin­g chase, tapping through menu after menu in hopes of reaching a person to fix the problem. It’s also something that upstart companies upending the investment and trading industry are increasing­ly acknowledg­ing.

Robinhood, the app that helps more than 22 million people trade stocks and cryptocurr­encies, announced Tuesday that it’s offering 24/7 phone support for its customers to cover almost every issue. It follows up on an announceme­nt by Coinbase, the cryptocurr­ency trading platform that said last month it would launch 24/7 phone service by the end of the year for many customers.

Before its own stock started trading on the public market for the first time, Robinhood cited “concerns about limited customer support” as one of its challenges. Earlier this year, Robinhood also settled a wrongful death lawsuit filed by the family of a 20year-old alleging he committed suicide after his emails to the company’s customer support about a $730,000 negative balance on his account received only auto-generated replies.

To reach Robinhood’s customer support in its early days meant to communicat­e mostly over email, but it’s been adding more live phone support in recent months.

“It takes a while to build a great support organizati­on, especially in a highly regulated business,” said Gretchen Howard, Robinhood Market Inc.’s chief operating officer. Agents need to be licensed, for example.

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