Customer service survey frowns on Comcast, Qwest, Dish
By Jeff Smith
Rocky Mountain News
Thursday, May 29, 2008
Colorado has
the notorious distinction of being a hub of sorts for companies
perceived as doling out poor customer service.
At least that’s according to this year’s edition of Zogby-MSN’s
Customer Service Hall of Shame.
Comcast, the state’s leading cable TV provider, placed No. 2 in
the Hall of Shame. Denver-based Qwest ranked fifth.
And Douglas County-based Dish Network came in 14th.
Zogby polled more than 7,000 consumers nationwide, asking them
to rate their experiences as “excellent,” “good,” “fair” or
“poor” with 140 major companies in 14 industries ranging from
telecommunications to retail. The survey was conducted
online.
Some 42 percent of respondents rated Comcast’s service as poor
and only 5 percent as excellent. Only AOL fared worse.
“We are clearly disappointed in the survey results,” said Cindy
Parsons, Comcast
Colorado
spokeswoman. “Earlier this year, we redoubled our efforts
to improve the customer experience and have begun fundamentally
changing the way we do business to improve customer
satisfaction.”
Thirty-four percent of the respondents familiar with Qwest rated
the telco’s service as poor and only 9 percent as excellent.
Qwest referred to a statement it gave an MSN Money reporter:
“Qwest is committed to the Spirit of Service, and always strives
to put the customer experience first. Over the past few
years, Qwest has made significant improvements in this
competitive service business as evidenced by its top ranking in
national customer service surveys and reports.”
Dish, which has openly acknowledged its customer-service issues
in recent months, was rated poor by 27 percent and excellent by
15 percent. Said Dish spokeswoman Francie Bauer, “We
realize we are not at the standard that we set for ourselves,
and we are making major investments to improve.”
One of Qwest’s shareholders chimed in about the company’s
customer service last week at the telco’s annual meeting in
Denver.
Joe Halpern, president of the Colorado-Wyoming chapter of the
Association of U S West Retirees, told Qwest CEO Ed Mueller that
he had experienced an increase in his bill and called the
company’s customer service folks to find out why. He said
Qwest bills are impossible to decipher.
While the customer service people were “very cordial,” Halpern
said, “they aren’t very knowledgeable.”
http://www.rockymountainnews.com/news/2008/may/28/service-survey-frowns-comcast-qwest-dish/
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