Daily News

Autopage trying harder after unjustifie­d suspension­s

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Then followed a series of administra­tive and customerca­re bungles, involving demands for money he didn’t owe, followed by several suspension­s of his cellphone service, once over an entire weekend.

I took up his case with Autopage’s customer relations manager, and at the time of writing, his problems appeared to be sorted out. But Bulford remained sceptical, as he’d been told that several times before, only to have his service suspended again.

I commented: “You’d think that after all the unjustifie­d suspension­s and hassle Bulford has endured, he’d have received an apology from Autopage and perhaps some ‘goodwill’ air- time credit. Nope. Clearly the company does not regard this as an exceptiona­l case.”

Gavin Weanie, Autopage’s customer operations executive, has since responded to that column.

“We aim to consistent­ly deliver excellent service to our customers and would like to acknowledg­e that in this particu- lar instance, the level of service Mr Bulford received was unacceptab­le.”

The case had been investigat­ed, his account had been credited and he’d been compensate­d “for the frustratio­n and inconvenie­nce he has experience­d”, Weanie said.

Bulford told me later: “I got a call from an Autopage employee telling me that management had read your article and as a goodwill gesture they have instructed a further credit of R1 224 be passed on my account.”

The company was in the process of revamping its complaints monitoring, reporting systems and turnaround times as part of its “customer-centric” journey, Weanie said.

E-mail Wendy Knowler on consumer@knowler.co.za

Twitter: @wendyknowl­er

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