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How it all began...
- June 13, 1996 -
Following a series of unpleasant incidents during a trip to Japan and
Hawaii, taken on United Airlines, I sent a polite
letter to United Airline's president, Mr. Gerald Greenwald, with a
copy to the director of Customer Relations, simply asking for a reply
to a number of complaints relating to their service.
- July 31, 1996 -
Having not received any reply, I sent a follow-up
letter to both Mr. Greenwald and the director of Customer Relations.
- late August, 1996 -
I received a form letter from an individual in
UAL's customer relations department, dated July 24, 1996 but postmarked
August 22, 1996. This letter completely ignores the substance of my
initial complaints and prompts me to set up the "Poor Show" web pages at
the University of Toronto. Note that it was not the poor treatment we
received from United, but rather, the subsequent disregard for a
serious, polite complaint, which led to the creation of the web pages.
During the next seven months, the pages grow as I receive approximately
30 additional letters from other former United passengers who also
complain about their own experiences with that airline.
- September 6, 1996 -
I informed UAL of my web pages, and suggested
that I would be happy to update both my opinion of the airline as well
as the web material, should they find the time to reply with something
more substantial than a form letter. I also mention that I am moving
to Japan and provide my new address for future correspondence.
- September 11, 1996 -
We received two flavors of a hostile letter from
Michael Kruse (aka "John")
of San Jose State University, demonstrating a severe misunderstanding
of our initial complaint letter to UAL. These
letters prompted us to hold a contest, in which we endorsed and
gave away the $100 travel vouchers to the first individual who identified
two such misunderstandings in the hostile letters. It didn't take long.
- November 11, 1996 -
After a lengthy correspondence with a UAL pilot,
who was concerned about the events described in my web pages, I sent an
additional follow-up note to Mr. Greenwald,
complimenting the pilot's concern for customer relations and again,
requesting a reply to my initial letter.
- January 8, 1997 -
A UAL representative sends me e-mail, informing
me that they are resending a letter of September 20 (which I never
received) and making a reference to their legal department. The promised letter is sent to my former address in
Canada, even though I had been using my Japan address ever since
September 1996.
- January 31, 1997 -
The promised letter arrives at my parent's
address in Canada, having been forwarded by Canada Post. The letter
was written by the same customer relations representative who sent me
the form letter reply on July 24, 1996.
Coincidentally, the same day that the old letter arrives in Canada,
this same customer relations rep notifies me that he has not been
employed by UAL for quite some time.
- March 24, 1997 -
I am informed that UAL's lawyers have contacted the President's Office
at the University of Toronto, complaining about my web pages and
suggesting that the university can be held liable for trademark
infringement. I immediately agreed to remove the web pages and locate
them elsewhere, thereby avoiding any legal problems for the
university.
- April 25, 1997 -
The Untied Airlines web site goes on-line,
complete with a new logo and more helpful information for
prospective passengers.
As one might expect from a corporation that cares little about its
customers, UAL took the predictable route of trying to silence a critic
(me) rather than deal with their problems constructively. Ironically,
if either Mr. Greenwald or any of UAL's Customer Relations employees
had taken a few minutes to read and reply to my letter of June 13, 1996,
they could have saved themselves lots of negative publicity
as well as many hours of their lawyers' time.
The history continues...
- August 15, 1997 -
After fourteen months, we finally receive an
apology from a UAL official, acknowledging that the previous (form
letter) "response to [my] complaints has been slow, impersonal and
insufficiently candid."
- March 31, 1998 -
In response to a statement by Tony Molinaro, United spokesman, that
"If [someone] had an issue where we disserviced them, we are willing to talk
to them about it" I send a tongue-in-cheek letter
to United, asking for Mr. Molinaro's telephone number so that passengers
could call him collect.
- April 6, 1998 -
As expected, United's reply to my request was not overly
helpful.
- October 21, 1998 -
With the help of financial contributions from many readers,
a new complaints form is put
on-line, with the ability to copy complaints directly to Denise
Harvill, United's Director of Customer Relations, and James Goodwin,
President and Chief Operating Officer of UAL.
- October 28, 1998 -
A news article is
posted to rec.travel.air in response to
a UAL employee's posting suggesting that the airline "does care" about
its passengers. The article describes the new
complaints form and how
it is being used to measure UAL's responsiveness to its customers.
- February 10, 1999 -
After many requests from readers, a
browsable database is made available, allowing interested parties
to read all of the complaints received since the new form (above) was
put on-line.
- September 9, 2000 -
In response to a query raised by another reader, an
email is sent to Denise Harvill, United's Director of Customer
Relations, asking her to confirm that she is able to receive messages
from concerned passengers. To date, no reply has been received.
Last modification Friday, 20-Jul-2007 14:43:02 PDT
Copyright © 2007
Jeremy Cooperstock. All Rights Reserved.
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