Today, three answers to three questions about complaints:
What, who and where?
First, what’s better, complaining by phone or by
letter?
If your problem must be resolved urgently, use the
phone. In all other circumstances write
a letter. Among the many reasons for
this is simply to make it easier for the organization to handle your complaint. They probably require facts and written
records for their complaint processing and letters provide a more reliable way
to deliver these than phone calls do.
You may also keep a copy of the letter for your records so you always
have something to refer back to.
Telephone calls are less controlled and allow emotions to
take over. Letters, on the other hand,
allow you to plan exactly what needs to be communicated. You can sit, calm down present your case in
the best possible way.
Second, once your letter’s written, to whom do you send
it?
The head of the customer service
department at the branch office nearest you is where you start. These are the people most prepared to help
you because this is what they do.
Writing to the CEO or the MD should be saved until the problem gets
worse or remains unresolved. Writing to
the top of the organization too early will only get you referred to the
customer service department by the CEO’s PA anyway.
Third, where do you complain if the organization fails to
satisfy you?
Before you take your
complaint too far, stop and ask yourself, is it really worth the effort? Is your need to push onward fueled by
emotions or by a genuine need for resolution?
Remember, some battles with giants aren’t worth fighting, so it may be in
your best interest to walk away.
Some things, however, are worth fighting for. If you feel the need for a personal crusade,
use the media to broadcast your situation.
This will get the attention of the organization you’re complaining
about. Write letters to government
regulatory bodies and ensure that you present clear records of everything that
has transpired so far.
Remember, the higher you go with your complaint, the more
professional and authoritative you will need to appear. Your further letters, therefore, will need to
be objective, factual and error-free. As
you may attract media attention, the image you present should be one of a
consumer wronged rather than of a whiner and whinger.
Filing complaints when necessary is a legitimate part of
doing business. That’s why we have
customer service departments. To ensure
that your complaints are honored and resolved, remain objective and follow due
process. Remember, most companies would
rather keep you happy.
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