Need to lose 500 words by Friday?
As an editor I can be brutal on word count without losing the really important stuff.
Need to lose 500 words by Friday?
As an editor I can be brutal on word count without losing the really important stuff.
Today's tale is my experience of buying train tickets from the First Great Western website. I was trying to buy a ticket from Oxford to London, returning on the following day.
Note: I think the error message is generated when you leave a time selected for the journey on the deleted date. If you go to the “time” dropdown and make the field blank, you don’t get the error message. Why doesn't the "time" dropdown default to blank on deleted dates?
Note: I'm really happy to say that this is now the case; the site improved between my using it last week and looking at it again today.
It came in the post today. It has the words “Day Travelcard” stamped across it. It’s not an open return at all. It’s only valid if I travel back the same day. Obviously, that’s not what I want or I wouldn’t have been searching for an open return.
The ticket came with an accompanying letter from First Great Western. “Your tickets are enclosed below […] If you have any queries about them, please call us on 0844 556 5606.” (The number is written in a red ink that must be hell for anyone with vision problems.)
I dialled it. Nothing. It’s not a valid number.
So I Googled FGW customer services. (Then I used SayNoTo0870 to find out the geographical number.) I spoke to a nice chap who said he was sorry, and of course they could refund the ticket since it was the wrong one, but he couldn’t do it personally and I would have to speak to the web team. He gave me their number: 0844 556 5605.
I couldn't find the geographical equivalent for that one, so I had to pay premium rates to be on hold for five minutes and then speak to someone in an Indian call centre. The man on the phone told me that First Great Western can’t change my booking to let me buy the thing I actually thought I was buying.
All they can do is cancel the original ticket and refund me. Then I can go through the joy of booking a new ticket. But I’ll have to post them back the original ticket. At my own expense. And they won’t refund me until they actually get the original ticket in the post. Oh, and it will cost me a £10 “administration fee”. (Obviously, I’m not going to pay £10 plus postage for a £15.20 refund that I don’t actually trust them to sort out.)
In February 2008, the Secretary of State for Transport issued First Great Western with a breach notice. She gave them until 2011 to make various improvements to passenger compensation, rolling stock and ticket pricing. Sadly, she didn’t ask them to simplify their ticket pricing structure or improve the usability of their website.