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Bschneider
09-28-2008, 09:02 AM
Personal Touch Fails At Verizon

The Tampa Tribune By RICHARD MULLINS
Published: September 27, 2008

TAMPA - Verizon Communications Inc. will end a pilot customer service program designed to give customers one person as a contact to help resolve billing or other issues, company officials confirmed Friday.

Verizon will let go about 300 contract workers called Personal Account Managers, or PAMs, and retain about 30 of them in-house as more traditional customer service representatives.

The PAMs program was an experiment that Verizon started in Brandon at a time when the company faced a growing flood of complaints about billing, promotional packages and other service glitches. The company had given all its customers refrigerator magnets with the name and cellular phone number of a single person at Verizon, their "PAM," who would be their advocate within Verizon to fix bills, add or remove features or otherwise help resolve a situation.

Verizon said that way, customers wouldn't be left on hold or sent through automated "phone trees," trying to find the right department. But the program didn't live up to the company's hopes, Verizon spokesman Bob Elek said.

PAMs were contract employees who worked at home. They never had authority to change a customer's bill themselves or do anything but call Verizon's in-house employees to request changes. PAMs were paid hourly in a job Verizon characterized as part-time work, though they were on duty six days a week, about 10 hours a day, a practice that has attracted at least one labor lawsuit in Tampa.

The 30 former PAMs will remain contract workers rather than full-time Verizon employees, Elek said.

http://www2.tbo.com/content/2008/sep/27/bz-personal-touch-fails-at-verizon/news-money/

Bschneider
09-28-2008, 09:12 AM
What was Verizon thinking? They created this program and then didn't give the PAMs the needed tools to actually do the work themselves.. They just called in-house employees to request changes.. no wonder "the program didn't live up to the company's hopes"..

and on top of that they were on duty 60 hours a week (six days a week, about 10 hours a day).. http://www.verizonpamlawsuit.com/..

Is is possible that Verizon is stopping the program because of the lawsuit?

SomeRandomIdiot
09-28-2008, 05:22 PM
Take this fwiw, but the installer I had (actually 2 Verizon employees, not sub-contractors) told me that guy over Florida was trying to make it fail as he had been demoted or something. Several months ago so I don't remember all the details. They told of how this guy was in a meeting in Polk County and fired on of their top people for no reason in front of a group just to prove that no one was safe. A month or so in Brandon they laid over several hundred subs, yet they did not have anyone to cover Dunedin/Clearwater yet so Tarpon Springs was forced to cover it, causing delays and issues all over. They went further to state that unless 70-90 people too retirement, they were going to layoff others. It's amazing every FiOS employee I have run into between install and repair (multiple times now) continues to apologize for the poor customer support. Between the cutbacks and layoffs, the morale is pretty bad.

pilotbob
09-29-2008, 09:20 AM
What was Verizon thinking? They created this program and then didn't give the PAMs the needed tools to actually do the work themselves.. They just called in-house employees to request changes.. no wonder "the program didn't live up to the company's hopes"..

Agreed. The one time I contacted my PAM for two issues, getting digital adapters and getting a cable repaired, she told me I had to call for the adapters and call service about the repair. I was thinking, I could have just done that in the first place my self. Contact with her was just an extra step. I expected her to be able to get those things done.

Oh well... there is no lack of bad implementations of good ideas I guess.

BOb

StevenA
09-29-2008, 11:49 AM
Hey, I never got my refrigerator magnet.

On a more serious note, I had mixed results with my PAM. She did successfully help me resolve a billing issue after two phone calls directly to Verizon customer service failed to get results. Also, she was fairly easy to get through to, either answering immediately or quickly returning my call. A call to Verizon customer service typically involves going through voice-menu hell before finally being put on hold for several minutes. On the negative side, she used a phone with a poor connection, and she spoke so fast and with such a strong slur that it was almost impossible to understand what she was saying. Three were occasions when I gave up trying to use my PAM because I simply could not understand what she was saying.

bdraw
09-30-2008, 09:34 AM
I got one call, I asked for their email address, and they said they didn't have one. I said then what good are you? What a joke.