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Get The Bacon Out Of Your Ears And Listen!

, , , , | Working | February 8, 2023

My son and I stop at a mostly-empty fast food place one morning to get food. He orders, and then it’s my turn. 

Me: “May I have a number nine, medium, with no meat, please?”

Cashier: “Ham, bacon, or sausage?”

Me: “No meat.”

Cashier: “Small, medium, or large?”

Me: “Medium.”

I’m thinking, “Seriously?”

She tells me the total and I pay it with my card. The machine asks if I want to leave a tip, and I hit the “no” button. 

Cashier: “I think you hit the wrong button by mistake. Do you want me to fix that?”

Me: “No. I didn’t. I’m good. May I have our drink cups, please?”

Not So Closed Minded: Bad Communication Edition

, , , , , | Working | February 8, 2023

I get a notice that there’s some recall work that needs to be done on my car. The paperwork says it’ll take about two hours. (I should have realized that’s two hours for the actual work but doesn’t necessarily take into account the time spent waiting at the dealership, but that’s a different story.) I call the dealership and get a time scheduled to bring my car in and get a loaner so I can go back to work.

I dropped my car off just before 8:00 am. At about 2:00 pm, I get a text.

Representative: “Hello, this is [Representative] from [Dealership]. Your car is next in line to have [recall work] done. Based on your car mileage, our technicians are also recommending [a whole bunch of stuff that basically boils down to an oil change]. The charge for that will be [almost $500]. Would you like them to do this work?”

Figuring that I can get the same oil change done at [Oil Change Chain] for $120 and laughing my a** off, I respond to the text.

Me: “Just the recall work at this time, please.”

Representative: “I’ll let the technicians know. Thank you.”

I get another message at 5:41 pm.

Representative: “Hello, this is [Representative] from [Dealership]. The work has been completed on your vehicle and you can pick it up at any time.”

I double-checked their signage when I dropped my car off that morning, as well as the website, and saw that they are closing at 7:00, so I finish a couple of things around the house and then go to the dealership.

I pull in at 6:05 and it’s pretty empty. I get out and try to go into the lobby, and it’s locked. I start glancing around and pulling up my phone to double-check the website as well as staring at the closed garage doors. Everything says they’re closing at 7:00.

An employee finally comes out a nearby door and seems startled to see me.

Employee: “Uh, hi.”

Me: “Hi, I got a message that I could get my car?”

Employee: “Well, uh, we’re closed.”

Me: “So, are you saying I can’t get my car?”

The employee likely sees that I’m about to cry.

Employee: “Uh, one moment.”

He disappears back inside.

Admittedly, having to wait a day to get my car probably wasn’t the end of the world, but I have been acting on the (supposed) knowledge that they are open until 7:00. I rearranged a few things to be able to be without my car for the day, but I need it tomorrow.

The employee finally pokes his head out the door.

Employee: “Okay, come on in.”

He took me up to the desk where they checked in the loaner and then sent me out to get my car. I finally got the rundown of what they did — just the recall work, so that’s free — what they wanted to do — the $500 oil change that I refused to do because that’s f****** insane — and the recommendation that I get the $500 oil change done ASAP. I got in my car and went home.

When I got home, I double-checked the paperwork as I was putting it in my files, and up at the top, the hours were listed as closing at 6:00 pm. That was literally the only place it was listed in any of their documentation.

I was so frustrated, especially with the text that said I could come and get my car. It would have been one thing if the representative had said something like, “Please be aware that we close at 6:00 but will reopen tomorrow,” and I’d just misread it or completely forgotten. But I double-checked all of the communication, and there was nothing. I submitted a review and tried to lodge a complaint, but it never went anywhere. It did ensure that I wouldn’t use that dealership unless I absolutely have to, though.

Related:
Not So Closed Minded, Part 30
Not So Closed Minded, Part 29
Not So Closed Minded, Part 28
Not So Closed Minded, Part 27
Not So Closed Minded, Part 26

Unsolicited Advice Is Just The Worst

, , , , | Working | February 8, 2023

My wife and I are moving our retirement accounts from one bank to another. Once we get the accounts set up at the new bank, we want to invest the money — nothing fancy, just standard retirement account stuff. Our previous bank let us choose some pre-made options based on risk tolerance, and we want to do something like that again, like a target retirement date fund.

But I can’t see any way on the bank’s website to actually invest the money in our retirement accounts. I call the bank and ask how to find that option.

Representative: “Oh, no, we don’t put that option on our website. We want everyone to come in and talk to us first, you know, so that we can get a sense of your financial situation and give you some advice with anything you need.”

Okay, sure. We agree to stop by the bank and make an appointment to come in on a Saturday morning. When we arrive, we’re led to a little office where [Representative] tells us that he’s going to run through a series of questions to determine how we might best invest our savings.

The questions are normal enough — salaries, debts, etc. — but they go on for a long, long time. My wife is four months pregnant, and she’s at the point where it’s painful for her to sit in one place for too long. This meeting lasts for almost three hours, blowing right past lunchtime, so toward the end, we’re also extremely hungry. But we think that if we can just make it through whatever this meeting is, we’ll be able to invest the savings and move on with our lives.

But no! The meeting ends, and that option is never discussed.

Me: “So, now that we’ve done this, how can we invest the money in our retirement accounts?”

Representative: “Oh, no, that’s not something we’d do now. We need to have another meeting to continue the conversation and really understand what kind of parameters are best for you.”

We agree to another meeting because we’re just desperate to get out of there. (I know, we’re fools.) The second meeting comes around, and again, we’re constantly under the (foolish) impression that we’re about five minutes away from the meeting ending and us having the answer we want.

But there’s another person who joins the second meeting: [Financial Advisor]. He introduces himself and starts singing his own praises, basically telling us how lucky we are to have his financial advice. (Side note: during the meeting, he gives us one specific piece of advice, telling me that I really should sell a certain stock — the only stock I own — because the CEO of the company is in poor health, and if the CEO dies, my stock will crash. I ended up separately taking his advice. The CEO did indeed die soon, and the stock soared.)

Throughout this meeting, I’m getting more and more upset that we’ve been tricked into what are clearly long-form thinly-veiled advertisements for [Financial Advisor]’s services. We reach the end of another multi-hour meeting, and again, when I ask how we can invest the money in our retirement accounts, he says he’ll call me to follow up.

At this point, I’m done with this guy. (I know, I should have been done with him much earlier.) He calls a few days later, and I ask him point-blank how to invest our money.

Financial Advisor: “That’s a great question! That’s the kind of thing we can discuss at our next meeting.”

Nope. I tell the guy — still politely — that we are not interested in paying for his advisory services, we never wanted such services, and we simply want to make our own choices about what to invest in.

Financial Advisor: “I wouldn’t feel comfortable telling you how to do that because that’s the purpose of our meetings. The advice I’d give you as your financial advisor—”

Me: “Please just tell me: is there a way I can simply choose what to invest in and have the bank invest in it?”

Financial Advisor: “No.”

Me: “Then if that’s something I want to do, you’re saying I need to use a different bank.”

Financial Advisor: “Well… that’s technically true, but I really recommend—”

Me: “Got it. Thanks for your help.”

I immediately withdraw all of our money, open an account with a different bank, and select what to invest it in. The process of selecting investments takes all of three minutes.

But the story isn’t over! When I check my account statement from the first bank, I see that they’ve charged me $225 as a processing fee for terminating the accounts. I call the bank and talk to the initial representative, explaining why we’re dissatisfied and why I’d like my $225 refunded.

Representative: “Sir, you came to us. You wanted financial advice.”

Me: “No, I didn’t. I wanted to choose what to invest in, and that’s it. [Financial Advisor] kept trying to market his services to us, and we didn’t want them.”

Representative: “That’s not the way I remember it.”

We went back and forth a bunch, and he kept refusing to refund the charges. It was maddening.

Finally, I was able to extract from him the email address of some higher-up to whom I could make a complaint. I wrote a long letter detailing all of this, and a few weeks later, I got a very apologetic phone call and a refund of $225. Phew.

It’s Okay, Author. I Was Confused, Too.

, , , , , , | Working | February 7, 2023

It is my very first day at the returns desk. A customer comes up with a small box.

Customer: “I need to return this.”

Me: “Okay, do you have the receipt?”

Customer: “No.”

Me: “Do you know when you bought it?”

Customer: “Like, two weeks ago? You should be able to look it up by serial number.”

Per my training, if an item has a serial number, I have to make sure the number on the item and the number on the packaging match. I open the box and, though the numbers match, I have no idea what the item is.

Customer: “It’s an Apple TV.”

Me: “Interesting. I’ve never seen one like this. Is it like a projector?”

Customer: *Confused* “No? I just said it’s an Apple TV.”

Me: “Okay… Let me get someone to help.”

I admit, I have NO idea what this thing is, as I have never heard of it before and cannot figure out how it could possibly be a TV. My manager comes over, and I explain that I need help finding the date of purchase to do the return. He shows me how to look for receipts on the computer system, and the return goes through. The customer turns to leave and then comes back.

Customer: “By the way, you know that’s not an actual TV?”

I can feel my ears getting hot.

Me: “I was very confused.”

Manager: *Laughs* “[My Name], did you think that was a real TV? It’s for streaming on a TV. Like with Netflix and whatnot.”

Me: “Well… that’s a stupid name.”

For months after this incident, my manager would joke with me, asking if I recognized random things as they were returned. All in good fun, though!

Making Assumptions Can Have Some Chilling Results

, , , , , , | Working | February 7, 2023

When I was in high school, my family moved from a suburban area to a very rural one. Instead of having a school bus stop right in front of our house, it was now at the end of our quarter-mile driveway. We were the first stop, and the second was another quarter-mile or so down the dead-end road.

On the first really cold day with ice and snow on the ground, my two brothers and I trudged out to the bus stop. The road was unplowed, but several vehicles had been over the inch or so of snow and ice. So, we waited. And waited. Etc. 

About a half-hour after our pickup time, we trudged back to the house and told Mom. She got dressed, got our youngest brother and us into the station wagon, and drove us the mile and a half to school. While we checked in and went off to class, she complained about the missing bus before driving our youngest brother to his school. 

It turned out that since the kids at the next stop were known to not bother with school on really cold or foul days, the driver had a habit of skipping our road on those days so she didn’t have to drive almost a mile on a one-lane road and execute a turnaround at the top of their farm road.

I guess she thought we were of the same mindset. If so, she guessed wrong.