Interested in opinions on this topic. Bit of a rant so please ignore if rants offend.
The scenario is a simple car hire in a NSW regional area. As is common, there's a 200 km/day limit. Google places the job at 186 km from the nearest airport. No problem. Two day return trip, sums add up. Just to be sure, noted odometer readings start and finish.
Reality; after hire discovery of $85 charge for 340 extra km's. Investigation reveals a simple error in that the original odometer reading should have been 17837, not 17537. The return mileage should have been 18226, not 18277.
Obviously, once noticed, objections were raised. Time went on, objections repeated. Finally, no explanations or apologies offered, $'s refunded.
I seem to be getting a lot of this these days so am beginning to wonder . If I exploited my access to customers credit cards to charge for fictional services (ie 340 km's of excess mileage), I'd be committing fraud. How is that larger companies appear to be able to hide behind "error" and simply refund the $'s taken? Noting that the refund only happens when the customer complains.
The scenario is a simple car hire in a NSW regional area. As is common, there's a 200 km/day limit. Google places the job at 186 km from the nearest airport. No problem. Two day return trip, sums add up. Just to be sure, noted odometer readings start and finish.
Reality; after hire discovery of $85 charge for 340 extra km's. Investigation reveals a simple error in that the original odometer reading should have been 17837, not 17537. The return mileage should have been 18226, not 18277.
Obviously, once noticed, objections were raised. Time went on, objections repeated. Finally, no explanations or apologies offered, $'s refunded.
I seem to be getting a lot of this these days so am beginning to wonder . If I exploited my access to customers credit cards to charge for fictional services (ie 340 km's of excess mileage), I'd be committing fraud. How is that larger companies appear to be able to hide behind "error" and simply refund the $'s taken? Noting that the refund only happens when the customer complains.