After months of regular and
largely uninterrupted cable television service my home Video On Demand access
suddenly evaporated. Research on the regularly
appearing error code showed that the problem occurred due to a weak upstream
signal to the headend.
Step four involved yet more calls to customer service, various tweets on the 2 Comcast sites and an email nominally sent to the customer care VP of the company. There seems to be fake, or unhelpful customer service and a real version should you make enough of a stink.
As dealing
with Comcast customer service rivals dental work, I tried several self-help
options available on the web site, include several reset commands from the headend
to my set top box. No luck.
Step two
involved multiple calls to Comcast to make the case for a premises visit. Understandably Comcast does not want to
authorize a “truck roll” in light of the cost.
So customer service representatives—all of them in the U.S. India and
possibly China—forced me to make the case repeatedly. It got old fast, particularly having to
undertake the same steps that did not work previously.
Step three
involved the first premises visit, a
most unsatisfying event. The technician arrived
and noticed that I had cord shaved, downgrading my service to basic cable. According to him, I am not entitled to on
demand service, notwithstanding clear evidence to the contrary on the Comcast
web page. The technician left without
replacing the set top box, or doing anything constructive.
This
frustrated my wife and me. Was this yet
another Comcast upsell strategy, or could the technician honest believe I was
not entitled to the on demand service?
How am I to order movies and add to me monthly bill?Step four involved yet more calls to customer service, various tweets on the 2 Comcast sites and an email nominally sent to the customer care VP of the company. There seems to be fake, or unhelpful customer service and a real version should you make enough of a stink.
Several
days passed before Comcast agreed to send another technician with instructions
to fix the problem. The solution:
removal of a defective and long unnecessary signal splitter installed by the
company.
There is
not much good news to report. Comcast
still has deplorable customer service designed to prevent real people from
providing a real solution. The company
still farms out customer service to individuals with limited English competency. Nobody followed up, but a company representative did make good on her promise of a $20 bill credit based on the much touted guarantee for on time
service remedies.
Nothing much has
changed and apparently the company still doesn’t really care.