Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Verizon Customer Service

This post was supposed to be about Canada, and the title of the post was going to be O, Canada. I'm in Victoria, in British Columbia. The company I work for (Perforce) has an office in Victoria and I've been working long-distance with the people here for the last nine months or so. I've been thinking about making a temporary move here, and today I met with Jason, the guy who runs the Victoria office, and we set a date. June 1. I'll be staying for four to six months to start, and who knows, I may wind up staying longer or even permanently.

So I'm all excited about this, and also pretty nervous. That's what this post was going to be about. I was going to start with my excitement and nervousness, and segue into some pithy stories about my interactions with Canadians. I was going to illustrate the post with a photo I took from my hotel window of the British Columbia capital building, all lit up like a Christmas tree. I took the photo on my cell phone, and it looks pretty good on the tiny cell phone screen.

But then I tried to send the photo to myself, at my email address, so I could post it to Salt in Wound. But it wouldn't send; all I could get was a message that says something like "Photo transmission failed". So I called Verizon customer service, and they were tenacious about trying to fix the problem to the point where it was almost ridiculous. The first woman I talked to had me punch in all sorts of secret codes (hint: if you press "Menu", then "0", and then "000000" you get a scary-looking Service Menu with all sorts of things in it that I don't want to go near). She talked me through that, and that didn't fix the problem, then she talked me through some other things, none of which worked. So then she transferred me to someone else with more expertise than her. After more than half an hour the new guy was still trying to talk me through possible fixes, to the point where I finally said, uh, look, this is great of you and all, but this isn't that important and tomorrow I can just get a SIM card and transfer the picture that way.

Oh - did I mention that they couldn't talk to me on my cell phone while I was trying these fixes, so they called me on the hotel phone at their own expense?

The point is: isn't Verizon customer service great? That's why this post is illustrated with Verizon's logo, and why this post is about them, and not about Canada.

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5 Comments:

Blogger Bernie said...

Robert, I think it's best to let the poor souls in the other country mess with your phone and make it work in said country. I have had troubles, and have had to go from place to place, (verizon denizens dialing and dialing) and finally they got it to work). I never bothered with trying to do it via customer service, it seems each phone is different.
You'll get there honey. You'll also see why salt and would doesn't exactly have international pics on it either.

January 29, 2008 9:49 PM  
Blogger frank b. said...

When we were briefly getting internet service through our cell phone (not recommended), I similarly spent a few hours with high-level T-Mobile customer service. Since they didn't have the correct scripts for my phone/operating system combination, they sent me to some British web site run by a guy whose hobby, apparently, is writing these scripts. You would think their self-image would compel them to hire someone to do this directly.

January 30, 2008 3:25 PM  
Blogger Jack Silbert said...

While I've been pleased with Verizon's customer service, I had a rude awakening about their Razr photo set-up. (Though nothing compared to the rude awakening you'll get from those Canadian geese.) My Razr needed replacing, but first I wanted to get all the horrible blurry photos I took of bands off of it. So I borrowed a mini-USB cord and hooked it up to the computer. Nothing. OK, OK, I'll go the Bluetooth route. Bought a little Bluetooth thingy. Now the phone and computer recognized each other. "Jack's phone! How are you doing?!?" "Well, Jack's computer, as I live and breathe! What a pleasant surprise!" But could I get the photos off the phone? No sir, i could not. After much research, it turned out that the only legal way to do this was to send them to Verizon's "Pix Place" site, at something like 25ยข a pop. Well, i soon changed my text-messaging plan to include pix messages, but for a short while, I was...unhappy with Verizon! And now it can be told.

January 30, 2008 9:50 PM  
Blogger Robert said...

Jack, thank you for your honesty. I do need to ask, though - did your Razr not have a slot for an SD card?

January 30, 2008 11:18 PM  
Blogger Jack Silbert said...

I guess I have an older razr, but no, there's no slot.

January 31, 2008 8:54 AM  

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