This only works by phone. Be nice, but firm. Don’t be satisfied with their first answer – make them escalate you to the retention department. They’re often authorised to give much larger discounts because it’s cheaper for them to retain customers than to recruit new ones.

  • @[email protected]OP
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    10 months ago

    I don’t get why you’re so angry about this, but I’m interested to know what’s so wrong about my tip.

    This came from a conversation I had about how back in the day, we were bombarded from all sides with advertising that encouraged us to call and cancel our services, with targeted ads and in-person door-to-door salespeople offering deals if we switched services at least once a year.

    It dawned on me that most of us ad block now, and we don’t get the constant reminders about our subscription fees, so we’ve seen shocking levels of price drift. We aren’t prompted to constantly compare our fees with competitors (when was the last time someone came to your door to encourage you to cancel?), and services take advantage of that by hiking prices by a small amount year on year hoping you won’t notice. And many of us don’t.

    So I’m your reminder instead. They have discounts they won’t tell you about unless you ask them, and this tip is no different from the reminders we used to get from their competitors, but slightly less in-your-face, and I’m not getting paid for it.

    eta: those people working under the boot get paid the same regardless of the call, it’s not like your discount comes from their paycheck. If anything, you’re justifying their job by calling. That’s a really weird argument. I did say be nice and respectful. Don’t be a Karen about it.

    • stevedidWHAT
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      210 months ago

      Not mad, but I can see how you could see that from my choice language that day.

      I just think that we have to call and even ask for this stuff is only enabling the problem. For me, when Netflix and all these other guys price hike, drop content, don’t give advertised streaming qualities and all of that, I dropped all of them. Now I pirate stuff again, I send YouTubers donations and use 3rd party apps to get around ads, etc.

      Consumers are brainwashed into thinking they have to do all this hoop jumping just to get a fair shake and it’s just not the case. Ultimately either scenario is fine, I was being a bit dramatic about the whole thing frankly. These people have options to work at other places in theory, and call center work or anything really that’s high touch with disgruntled people or other abusive circumstances should be done away with entirely. I find it frankly pretty gross that we subject ourselves to abuse just to be able to afford to eat and live anywhere half comfortable.

      Thanks for keeping things civil with me, I appreciate it.

      • @[email protected]OP
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        10 months ago

        For me, when Netflix and all these other guys price hike, drop content, don’t give advertised streaming qualities and all of that, I dropped all of them.

        Right, and I’m saying instead of just silently dropping them, call first and tell them you’re going to drop them. See what deal they’re willing to give you. Then drop them if you’d like, but it’s worth asking.

        Obviously financial protest is useful against corporations, and some of us can protest more effectively given our nation/position/understanding. I do what I can.

        e: Thank you for your civility, too. I appreciate that we have that here. Cheers.