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Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Amazon Payments: Customer Service Shortcomings

I had not planned to write my first post (for a long time) on Amazon Payments but sheer frustration with this new service has driven me to write on this topic. Amazon Payments is a new service introduced by Amazon to compete with PayPal and the new Google payments service. These types of personal payment services are great for entrepreneurs because they allow small businesses to take payments over the internet without having to manage the payment process themselves.

My company switched to Amazon Payments a month ago (from PayPal) because they were offering a few months of service without fees and because they allowed us a few programming options that PayPal did not. Specifically they allowed us to redirect subscribers to our site where they could complete an application form to set-up their account with us all in one step (PayPal required us to send a confirmation email to take the subscribers to the correct account set-up page).

The Amazon Payments service worked very well for us when it came to setting up and taking our first few payments. However, when it came time for us to withdraw the money Amazon and put it in our bank account we ran into problems. A bug in their system would not allow us to withdraw funds even though we had received the funds 3 weeks ago and had waited their 14 day wait period for withdrawals. Given that we were beta testing the software, I am not complaining about finding a bug in the system. My complaint with Amazon Payments is that they were not equipped to respond to complaints that were about bugs.

Flaws with the Amazon Payments Customer Service Process:
  1. They only allow email complaints using their form. They do not provide users with either a direct email address OR a phone number.
  2. Their customer service reps DO NOT read either the email you send or your transaction history when responding to your complaint.
    • In my case they kept responding to my email by telling me that I could not withdraw my entire balance. I could just withdraw the amount tha thad been in the account for over 14 days and never noticed that I was complaing that I could not withdraw the balance that had been in my account for 14 days AND I had multiple transactions in my transaction log that showed I could not withdraw the amount of money they said I should be able to withdraw!
  3. When they have an error in their response you cannot reply to their email and tell them that they have made an mistake. You must go through another online form (which they do not read when you send it to them).
  4. There is no phone number anywhere for Amazon Payments! I finally called the Amazon Corporate office and could not get the number or name of anyone in the Amazon Payments department. All the customer service reps in the corporate office could do was send an email to the amazon payments office to get them to address the bug in their system.
When someone has your money and there is a bug in their system that keeps you from getting it a company needs to have some recourse to allow customers to report problems and talk to someone that can actually help them. In my case not only did one customer service rep ignore my transaction history and tell me I just needed to log in and withdraw my disbursable balance. When I replied that that rep had not solved my problem A second rep ignored my history AGAIN and gave me the same response.

The only way I was able to get any response from them was to Tweet them on Twitter - and then I finally got someone to look at my account.

That is not the way for any company to do business!

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    1 Comments:

    This is similar to problems I had with the main Amazon site several years ago. Too busy protecting their privacy to service their customers effectively.

    By Blogger Lisa, at 9:22 AM  

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