Sunday 8 May 2016

Aftermath

Currys And Laithwaites: The Aftermath
Following on from my previous posting I emailed both Currys and Laithwaites to say that I had written up my experience of their sites and directed them here. Laithwaites emailed back to say thank you and that my write up had been referred to their web team. Whether Laithwaites do anything about my comments or not remains to be seen but they are clearly open to feed back so there is hope.

The response from Currys was different. They emailed back to say they weren't able to read my write up. I presume that this waa because of some company restriction on accessing this site rather than dyslexia or illiteracy on their part. Their email went on to request details of the purchase I had made for which I wished to make a claim. I obviously did not wish to make a claim since the whole point of this correspondence was that I hadn't been able to make a purchase because of their inexplicable insistence on a UK billing address. Clearly, in the case of currys, the robots have taken over, maybe an overspill from their sister organisation PC World (or should that be PC UK if their billing system is the same as Currys?).

Monday 7 March 2016

Change Of Web Address

Were Moving
I'm in the process of moving this blog to a new host service which should allow it to be seen be more surfers. I can't be sure exactly when the new host servcie will cut in but, when it does, the new address will be a sinple change: from www.theelseclauseonline.blogspot.com to www.theelseclauseonline.com. The “blogspot” simply gets dropped. To continue to view the blog, use the current address, the one you always have, until you can't find the blog; then use the new address. I hope that is straightforward for you.

Saturday 20 February 2016

More Examples: Currys And Laithwaites

Here are two more frustrating online experiences, involving Currys and Laithwaites, the one much more frustrating than the other.

Currys
I tried to order a radio from Currys which my daughter had said she would like for her birthday and which I wanted delivered to her address in Scotland. Ordering it was straightforward until I got to the payment page, which insisted on my having a UK address. Since I live in France I obviously don't have one. I thought about giving a friend's address but then the credit card details wouldn't have matched. Annoyed, I sent Currys a snotty email, complaining. Currys did get back to me promptly but said it was company policy to accept payments only from UK bank accounts, further explaining that they were a national company and the UK was their only market. That was fine by me, since I have a UK bank account. The problem, it seems, is that Currys do not understand that people living outside the UK can quite legitimately have a UK bank account. Legislation introduced around the turn of the century to force a UK address for UK bank accounts was not retrospective, so existing UK accounts held by people living outside the UK were not affected. Currys do not seem to know this so I enlightened them, though whether they now do anything about it remains to be seen. As things stand they are unnecessarily limiting their market to UK residents. Yet there are thousands of Britons living abroad with perfectly legal UK bank accounts. That's Currys funeral but the irony is that they call their customer care team Know How when their knowledge is clearly lacking.

Laithwaites
I also wanted to order a case of wine for my daughter and went onto the Laithwaites site to do this. Once again ordering was straightforward but for some reason the last page which should have confirmed completion of the transaction didn't load. Laithwaites clearly noticed that the transaction had failed because they sent me an email asking me if I wanted to complete the transaction and to « click here » if I did. I duly clicked, expecting to be dropped back into the transaction at some point before I entered any security-sensitive details. In fact what I was faced with was a page that offered me two choices: to buy more wine or subscribe to their newsletter. I wanted to do neither and so sent another complaining email, this time to Laithwaites. This was acknowledged but followed by the same email wanting to know whether I wanted to complete the transaction as before. I was about to complain again when another email from them arrived saying they had completed the transaction and the wine was on its way.

That was good, as it happens, and justifiable since I had earlier clicked to say I wanted to complete the transaction. Between then and their final email, however, I could have changed my mind since a couple of days had elapsed, so it was slightly presumptuous of them. However, credit to them for noticing the failed transaction and doing something about it. The failure may well have been a result of the notorious « transient error ». They still need to do better on their offer to complete transactions however.