Jean DeVries
Gold Member
- 445
AARGH! My sister (who just got out of the military, and is still looking for a job) and I decided that we were going to book our airline tickets for the cruise we're taking in January. We figured that since oil is like a trillion dollars a barrel, the prices can only go up, so we thought we should book now.
So, after several minutes of checking different sites, clearing our temporary internet files (did you know the longer you look, the higher the prices get? On purpose...the airlines do this to you), and looking at alternate locations, we settled on an American Airlines flight that got us where we wanted to go when we wanted to go there.
So, separately, on different computers, but talking on the phone so we could make sure we got the same flight and seats next to each other, we found the same flights, with the same rates and everything. So, at the same time, we clicked the "Purchase" button. At the same time.
My flight was the originally advertised price of $375, hers went up to $410.
And of course, I purchased, so we couldn't just start over.
So, of course, by now I'm hot. And because I work in Customer Service, I know what good customer service is and how to get it. I called the airline, hoping to be able to cancel my ticket (as I have done a few other times with competing airlines...they let you cancel if they haven't ticketed yet...which, with most airlines, takes more than 1/2 hour). I called no less than 10 minutes after booking the ticket.
The woman told me, "I'm sorry, ma'am, but that's not my problem." Um. Excuse me? You work for the company, it is most definitely your problem. And then she said to me, "I don't set the prices." True, but again, you represent the company that sets the prices. Then she told me that the company doesn't set the prices. I repeatedly asked her, "You mean the airline company doesn't set the prices for it's own product?" She said that yes they did, but the company didn't. Wha?
So, I can't cancel my flight, and my sister can't get a flight at the same price as mine. I understand how airline seats are priced (well, as well as anyone can understand that giant mystery), but what I don't understand is why their customer service representatives aren't empowered to make the customer happy. For crap sake, you can't tell me that a seat costs more three seconds later than another one. And at least their website could tell you that there's only one seat left at that price, because there were other flights that day for the same price that we could have booked instead.
This was my first, and last, flight on American Airlines. I shot them off an ugly email, so now I'm pretty sure they'll lose my luggage Better wear layers on my way down so I have extra clothes on the cruise
So, after several minutes of checking different sites, clearing our temporary internet files (did you know the longer you look, the higher the prices get? On purpose...the airlines do this to you), and looking at alternate locations, we settled on an American Airlines flight that got us where we wanted to go when we wanted to go there.
So, separately, on different computers, but talking on the phone so we could make sure we got the same flight and seats next to each other, we found the same flights, with the same rates and everything. So, at the same time, we clicked the "Purchase" button. At the same time.
My flight was the originally advertised price of $375, hers went up to $410.
And of course, I purchased, so we couldn't just start over.
So, of course, by now I'm hot. And because I work in Customer Service, I know what good customer service is and how to get it. I called the airline, hoping to be able to cancel my ticket (as I have done a few other times with competing airlines...they let you cancel if they haven't ticketed yet...which, with most airlines, takes more than 1/2 hour). I called no less than 10 minutes after booking the ticket.
The woman told me, "I'm sorry, ma'am, but that's not my problem." Um. Excuse me? You work for the company, it is most definitely your problem. And then she said to me, "I don't set the prices." True, but again, you represent the company that sets the prices. Then she told me that the company doesn't set the prices. I repeatedly asked her, "You mean the airline company doesn't set the prices for it's own product?" She said that yes they did, but the company didn't. Wha?
So, I can't cancel my flight, and my sister can't get a flight at the same price as mine. I understand how airline seats are priced (well, as well as anyone can understand that giant mystery), but what I don't understand is why their customer service representatives aren't empowered to make the customer happy. For crap sake, you can't tell me that a seat costs more three seconds later than another one. And at least their website could tell you that there's only one seat left at that price, because there were other flights that day for the same price that we could have booked instead.
This was my first, and last, flight on American Airlines. I shot them off an ugly email, so now I'm pretty sure they'll lose my luggage Better wear layers on my way down so I have extra clothes on the cruise