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    • Yes typed it, how would I input it any other way, probably timed out took over half hour. H
    • You typed it in? actually typed it all out? if so, maybe you took too long or something, like session timed out. Does the status show defence filed or no change?
    • Hi just typed all defence clicked next and it's deleted all. Any help
    • I forgot to say, there is one last possibility and that is that they will receive your letter of rejection and simply fold, accept the rejection and refund you. Don't wait too long for this. Seven days maximum – but in that seven days you could send your letter of claim anyway and when that you don't hear from them or when they start mucking around at least you are seven days closer to beginning the legal action – and they will know it (which is the important thing).
    • Okay that is excellent that you have an email between the garage and the warranty company confirming that there is a serious problem with the gearbox. That is very powerful evidence. I think the situation is this: you have sent them a letter of rejection but the reputation of big motoring world is that they won't take a lot of notice and they will try to prevaricate and maybe even blame you. Clearly you don't want the car any more and anyway it sounds as if the cost of repairs is going to be enormous. You don't know if the warranty company is going to step up to the mark but the whole thing is going to take a long time and I understand that you have lost confidence in big motoring world because of this event and also their reputation which you are now discovering on Facebook and on this forum and no doubt elsewhere. On the basis that you don't want the car any more and you want your money back, you need to hurry things along. I think the first thing is that you need to decide if you are prepared to bring a claim in the County Court. Even without the warranty money, the claim is worth more than £10,000. For actions less than £10,000, you bring a "small claim" and this means that even if you lose the case you won't be liable for the other side's costs. If you win the case then not only will you get your money plus interest but also you will recover all of the costs of the action. For actions more than £10,000, you go to something called the "fast track" and in the event that you lose the case, then you could be liable to reimburse the winner some of the costs. This means that in addition to not recovering your own money, you would lose your own court fees and also you would have to to bear the costs of the other side probably something less than £5000 – but as a rough guess. If you bring your court claim then your chances of success are almost 100%. Frankly if you brought a court claim then I can imagine that big motoring world will put their hands up and pay you out rather than face go to court and losing and getting a judgement against them. However, it you need to consider that this is a risk factor – although my view it is a negligible risk factor. If you did bring a court case, it wouldn't be instant. If they put their hands up then it would probably happen very quickly. If they didn't put their hands up then you could take anything up to a year for the matter to be resolved and during that time you would be without your car and without your money and in the middle of litigation. I'm explaining this to you say that you understand how it works. Bring a court case would be really the last resort when everything else has failed. However, I'm quite certain that you would win and it would be stupid of big motoring world to try to resist. In order to bring a court case you would have to send a letter of claim giving them 14 days to accept rejection and organise the refund otherwise you would begin the claim. Don't imagine that you could bluff this. If you did send a letter of claim then you would have to go through with it otherwise you lose all credibility and you might as well pack up and go home. So with this in mind, here are possible courses of action you could take. You can simply wait and see what their reaction to your letter of rejection will be. However they may not reply or else they may find some other reason to delay and of course during that time you will be without your car and without your money blah blah blah, not knowing if big motoring world were going eventually to start acting sensibly and respectfully towards you. The second thing you can do – and I think this has been suggested on Facebook – is that you can go along there and simply make yourself present and talk to other customers and generally speaking make a nuisance of yourself and embarrass them to the point where you would be explaining to other potential customers to be careful, to look on Facebook, and to do some careful research before they put their business to big motoring world. This has a reasonable chance of success although you would have to be careful. You should go accompanied by a friend and there should be no anger, no arguments, nothing that could be considered as being overly aggressive so that big motoring world would have no justification in kicking you out or even worse, calling the police. If you did this, then I would suggest that you record everything on the telephone carried in a pocket. A fully charged battery will probably keep a voice recorder and a telephone going for more than 20 hours or 30 hours. The other person can video any incidents so that everything is clear and you can inform big motoring world then it will be going up on the Internet. If you did this, my favourite option would be to issue the letter of claim giving them 14 days, and then going along to big motoring world with a copy of your letter of rejection and a copy of the exchange between the mechanic and the warranty company and a copy of your letter of claim – all settled together – and probably about 20 or 30 copies in all and I would start handing them out to any customers who came in. Big motoring world will soon get the picture and they will either move your the premises in which case you stand outside and carry on doing it or they will finally give in. Of course there is a chance that they won't give in and they will simply call your bluff – but in that case I think you have no choice other than to follow through with your 14 day threat in the letter of claim and to begin the legal action. At the same time you should be putting up reviews on Google and also trust pilot explaining exactly what has happened and also explaining that the mechanic has confirmed to the warranty company that there is the serious problem, that you have asserted the right to reject and that this is been ignored by big motoring world and that you have now sent a letter of claim and that you will be starting a legal action in 14 days. Once again, don't bluff about the legal action. If you threaten it – then you must mean it – and on day 15 you click of the claim. You don't need a solicitor for any of this. It's all fairly straightforward and of course we will help you all the way that it the decision is yours to make and I think you need to make it fairly quickly. I think the cost of starting an action for about £13,000 is 5% and then also if it goes to trial which I would say is almost impossible – there would be an additional fee. You would claim interest at 8%. A judge might award a lower figure but frankly if you can show that big motoring world is attempting to ride roughshod over your very clear statutory consumer rights, I can imagine that the judge will want to show displeasure by awarding the full 8% which is a pretty good rate – even though it's not compensation for the hassle and the distress you are going through. If you decide to get solicitor, then if you win the case, because it is over £10,000 you will recover some of your costs but you won't recover all of them. If the solicitor begins by having exchanges of letters then I doubt whether you will be up to recover the cost of those and you could easily find that you're chalking up 500 quid or even a thousand simply on initial exchanges of correspondence. Also you need to bear in mind that if after having exchanges with a solicitor, big motoring world cave in – then you definitely won't get those costs back because you won't have gone to court and therefore a judge will not have made the order for payment of those costs. I suggest very strongly that you avoid paying any money for a solicitor and that you do it yourself. It's not a big deal – although you will have to you react quickly to the help we offer on this forum. Also, an additional benefit is that you will learn a lot and you will gain confidence and eventually you will feel good about suing anybody else who gets in your way. Nothing not to like! If you do decide to instruct a solicitor then you must take control of the solicitor. Most of them prefer to sit in an office writing letters on the clock. If you do decide to instruct a solicitor then you must instruct the solicitor very firmly that they should send one letter of complaint giving seven days. A second letter – a letter of claim giving 14 days and that they must then begin the action. If you don't do this. If you don't take control then it will simply cost you money, you will be without your car even longer and of course without your money. The whole thing is a nightmare. I think I've laid out the options but please do ask questions. I hope you can see that this is the kind of advice that you won't be getting on Facebook. Nothing against Facebook. It's good as a meeting place and to make people realise that they aren't on their own – but after that the advice given is weak and confusing.  
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    • Hello,

      On 15/1/24 booked appointment with Big Motoring World (BMW) to view a mini on 17/1/24 at 8pm at their Enfield dealership.  

      Car was dirty and test drive was two circuits of roundabout on entry to the showroom.  Was p/x my car and rushed by sales exec and a manager into buying the mini and a 3yr warranty that night, sale all wrapped up by 10pm.  They strongly advised me taking warranty out on car that age (2017) and confirmed it was honoured at over 500 UK registered garages.

      The next day, 18/1/24 noticed amber engine warning light on dashboard , immediately phoned BMW aftercare team to ask for it to be investigated asap at nearest garage to me. After 15 mins on hold was told only their 5 service centres across the UK can deal with car issues with earliest date for inspection in March ! Said I’m not happy with that given what sales team advised or driving car. Told an amber warning light only advisory so to drive with caution and call back when light goes red.

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    • We have finally managed to obtain the transcript of this case.

      The judge's reasoning is very useful and will certainly be helpful in any other cases relating to third-party rights where the customer has contracted with the courier company by using a broker.
      This is generally speaking the problem with using PackLink who are domiciled in Spain and very conveniently out of reach of the British justice system.

      Frankly I don't think that is any accident.

      One of the points that the judge made was that the customers contract with the broker specifically refers to the courier – and it is clear that the courier knows that they are acting for a third party. There is no need to name the third party. They just have to be recognisably part of a class of person – such as a sender or a recipient of the parcel.

      Please note that a recent case against UPS failed on exactly the same issue with the judge held that the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 did not apply.

      We will be getting that transcript very soon. We will look at it and we will understand how the judge made such catastrophic mistakes. It was a very poor judgement.
      We will be recommending that people do include this adverse judgement in their bundle so that when they go to county court the judge will see both sides and see the arguments against this adverse judgement.
      Also, we will be to demonstrate to the judge that we are fair-minded and that we don't mind bringing everything to the attention of the judge even if it is against our own interests.
      This is good ethical practice.

      It would be very nice if the parcel delivery companies – including EVRi – practised this kind of thing as well.

       

      OT APPROVED, 365MC637, FAROOQ, EVRi, 12.07.23 (BRENT) - J v4.pdf
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Job Centre "not coping"


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I have a degree in Fine Art...I work as an administration officer in local government. My degree didnt get me the job, I dont use the subject specific skills I attained during my degree in my current job but it did show my employers that I can research a particular subject, and compete to attain a certain level of acheivement. Sometimes the subject of the degree is irrelevant to a perspective employer.

 

I would just say that we are all entitled to a living and all entitled to respect, safety and common courtesy in our respecive jobs. You may dissagree with what staff at the Jobcentre say to you or perhaps the way they say it, and I am by no means apologising for people with an unfortunate attitude, but what I would say is that these people have been given the job of helping jobseekers help themselves to find work and protect the public purse...that is taxpayers money that you and I have paid our hard earned money into ....surely you would want to know that there are rules and regulations as to who, when and how that is paid out?

Advice given is my opinion only, I am not a legal or financial expert (far from it).

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..... and protect the public purse...that is taxpayers money that you and I have paid our hard earned money into ....surely you would want to know that there are rules and regulations as to who, when and how that is paid out?

 

Can we get Gordon Brown a position in a Job Center, maybe he could learn something.

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on the subject of "womans work" etc, i must say that despite equality for the sexes and so on that sex discrimination is still very much alive in determining what sort of work you will get.

 

My work experience is mainly in admin, with healthy doses of IT and customer service, but being as how IT jobs in my area are almost non existant i am having to look for work mainly in admin or customer service.

the problem with this is many employers dont like the idea of having male administrators, seeing it as "womans work" because at some point you may have to file or photocopy something, which is what they have secretaries for.

 

Some would dispute this kind of thing happens, but trust me, i know, ive been there.

 

 

As for the jobcentre, i have yet to meet a jobcentre employee who could tell their arse from their elbow, they arent interested in helping you in the slightest, they cant give you any advice, all they are there for is to, ooh, what a suprise!, to meet targets.

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Totally agree with all you say,they met their target with me because I walked out on them,one less unemployed even though I am still unemployed and there are probably thousands like me out there so what the true jobless figure is is anyones guess:rolleyes:

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There is definitely some sexism going on. Look at call center team leaders. Vast majority are female from my experience.

 

And just to combine targets, call centers and sex, three males (me being one) and a female applied for a more specialised position dealing with complaints at DL. The girl got it even though she cried whenever a customer got angry or hostile and she did not understand how the FOS works or their complaints procedure. Hmmm.

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Youve got one with a brain? Hope it catches on !!!:shock:

 

 

dont worry, the jobcentre will probably shift him into admin or something at the end of his next 12 week contract and he will leave for another job somewhere else.

 

BTW, did you know job centre employees are only employed on a 12 week basis?

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Its not to say I haven't had bad ones in the past. Like Monx I come from a Fine Art background. Agencies and employers have literally run away from someone they generalise as being not committed or interested in holding a job outside of their 'specialist' subject area. It is an uphill struggle just to get to the interview stage, and I would consider pretty much anything! Does not help that they can google my name and check the creative stuff I have been doing, which in their eyes means I won't be 100 per cent committed. It has been hard to communicate this to the Jobcentre. If they gave me a job as an advisor I know I would probably be able to offer more constructive help. Once, I got sent to a CV writer who actually reformatted my CV in a (his words) 'funky' cartoon font, as he thought it would help me get a job at quite a high profile commercial art gallery :D:D:D Thank god I didn't send it anywhere. It looked ridiculous! But...I do now have a really supportive advisor who is actually being proactive at finding the support for me to set up something myself with some of my technical skills...and I don't think I will be signing on much longer as it seems to be going well. I have to support the jobcentre staff a little bit. I have seen one being physically assaulted and I would not like to do the job myself. Having said that, I know just how damn frustrating the place can be. Unfortunately you do have to think outside of the box when dealing with them, which involves jumping through some of their seemingly ridiculous hoops, but if you do enough digging, it is possible to get something out of them. Just don't expect them to be able to offer you serious career advice...:) Good luck everyone!

 

 

 

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wel, if there is an advisor that is willing to help then id like to know why all of them arent the same?.

 

i mean at my jobcentre, they have posters up saying to ask about various things, but when you ask the advisors just look back at you blankly and say "er..dunno"...that isnt an acceptable answer.

i once asked one what his capacity was there, as in his job title, he replied he was a "customer service advisor", so i replied that if that was his job, then how come he wasnt able to advise a customer on a service that was being advertised by his employer...all i recieved back was another blank look and a drawn out "errrrrrrrr", even when i asked to speak to his manager, the MANAGER wasnt able to help either, but yet the sodding thing i was asking about was written on a poster not less than 6 feet away from me clearly stating "ask a member of staff for details" .

 

its pathetic, the jobcentre is a joke, the benefit system is a joke, and this country is going swiftly down the ****ter because the people in charge cant be arsed to spend that few extra quid to ensure the staff they employ are actually able to do their jobs and trained to provide whatever it is they are supposed to provide.

All tha matters is targets, targets, targets ****ing targets!!, each jobseeker gets 5 minutes of the "advisors" time (your appointment duration is actually written on your claim/signing pack, if youre eagle eyed enough to notice), in said time they quickly run through a memorised script and if theres any deviation from that then their entire system collapses, just because someone who has an IQ larger than their shoe size asks an intelligent question and quite reasonably expects an intelligent answer.

 

now im mad.

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I totally agree that they should the extra quid and employ brighter people. I have been very lucky with my advisor this time and I totally understand your frustration. I have been through the benefits system forwards and backwards over the years due to the irregular nature of my work, and all I can do now is just smile when I encounter incompetence. Sadly, having more than a single braincell myself, I know how easy it would be to totally run rings around them too, which is a rather worrying thought given the economic state of the country. In my experience, the frontline advisors are the worst. The ones that do the review appointments or start claims are often better...I made a few requests and got to see one of these people regularly which helped. Other times I have literally had to speak to people like they are two years old to explain things step by step. All I can say is keep the faith...:)

 

 

 

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I think part of the problem is that they are not seeing themselves for what they are.

 

In my initial interview, I was chatting to the guy and asked him why claimants were now called customers. He couldn't really answer except to say that it sounded better than claimant.

 

I view such terminology as a pollutant to the true functions of various services.

 

When I was in nursing, there was much talk about "professionalism" and the name of the role, but little talk about what the job entailed. Patients were termed "service users" and changed again to something equally daft.

 

Now claimants are "customers". Err, I don't buy anything from the job centre (yu can take that to mean anyway you want!). I do not have the choice of getting benefits or signing on elsewhere or, if I want to survive, going to the JC at all. So I am not a "customer". I am a claimant. I am claiming on the (extortionate) taxes I have paid since leaving full time education, as well as that of others - hopefully for not very long at all. I obviously want to get a job ASAP. Yes, the JC can help in that, but they do not have jobs in my field (that I can find).

 

The only jobs they are offering are those that I will leave as soon as something better comes along or those that employers will not want me for due to, err, people such as me not wanting them and leaving as soon as something better comes along.

 

The sooner the powers that be stop messing about with terminology and start calling a spade a spade (and pleeeeze don't quote Oscar Wilde's unfunny retort to that saying) the better.

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When I was in nursing, there was much talk about "professionalism" and the name of the role, but little talk about what the job entailed. Patients were termed "service users" and changed again to something equally daft.

 

on the subject of so called "professionalism", when i was 18 i worked in a large call centre, and the company handbook was 20 pages long (A4 sized).

12 pages of this book detailed all the "offences" which you could be disciplined for, and the disciplinary proceedure itself, which they said was geared towards "maintaining a professional image and environment".

one section of "the rules" detailed so called "unprofessional language", which detailed so called "negative words and phrases likely to bring the company into disrepute", words such as:-

 

Unfortunatley

Can't/cannot

Wont/will not

Impossible

Apology

Sorry

Fault

Its a problem at our end (or any mention of anything which made the company sound at fault or if it was having problems in any way, eg systems down, insufficiently trained advisors etc)

 

if you were caught using any of these words on your call monitorings then you were immediatly reprimanded, 3 such reprimands led to a stage 1 warning.

 

 

Now claimants are "customers". Err, I don't buy anything from the job centre (yu can take that to mean anyway you want!). I do not have the choice of getting benefits or signing on elsewhere or, if I want to survive, going to the JC at all. So I am not a "customer". I am a claimant. I am claiming on the (extortionate) taxes I have paid since leaving full time education, as well as that of others - hopefully for not very long at all. I obviously want to get a job ASAP. Yes, the JC can help in that, but they do not have jobs in my field (that I can find).

 

This is my point exactly. back when i signed on for the very first time in 1998, the jobcentre could set jobs up for you, and could even force employers to give you work, they had lots of training courses in useful stuff available to claimants who were interested, and the staff would go out of their way to help you.

Al thats gone now obviously, because if they still did stuff like that it would mean that they were actually being something like a job centre, instead of a drop in centre.

You cant go anywhere else to claim your benefits, so why they insist on referring to people as "customers" is beyond me, but i suppose its all part an parcel of the facade they try to put accross that they are genuinely interested in helpng people back to work.

 

The only jobs they are offering are those that I will leave as soon as something better comes along or those that employers will not want me for due to, err, people such as me not wanting them and leaving as soon as something better comes along.

 

yeah, this is the sort of thing im getting. the area where i live is having a bit of an employment crisis of late, and new vacancies are few and far between, but the ones that do come up are usually care jobs (~ 50%), semi skilled labour (~15%) part time food preparation work (~20%) and the rest is the sort of stuff im looking for.

the jobseekers agreement states that i should be looking for work in the areas that match my skills, however my skills only fall into about 10% of available work, and with about 50000 unemployed in my area, employers are going to be piky about who they employ, so that aint my fault.

 

I have no qualms whatsoever about claiming benefits, i have paid my taxes over the years, and ive had some good paid jobs so ive paid a fair bit of money in to the system, so its only right that i should expect some back when i need it.

The government is quite happy to give money out to anyone who turns up on the back of a lorry, or to idle layabouts who are only good for making babies and occupying prison cells, so they can be happy to give some to me as well.

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all i will say is that they are a UK based "customer service" outsourcing company who have had contracts for several utility companies, ISPs and banks over the years.

 

Sounds like a company I used to work for, who are owned by a major utility company, until the utility company took the contract back in house.

 

Anyways, back to the subject...

 

Not all staff at job centres are bad at what they do, there are some helpful staff out there it's just that they are few and far between. There is a lot to be said for people skills training :)

 

From experience in the past, I have never gained employment through any of the job centre vacancies and my advisor has agreed that it is unlikely that I will find a suitable vacancy in my area for my skills through the job centre as the vast majority of the vacancies they have are either in care or warehouse vacancies which require flt licences, which I don't have. However I will not rule out a job just because it doesn't match my exact skillset requirement, I would much prefer to be in employment that having to rely on JSA each fortnight.

 

I agree that the job centre is not currently set up in a way which will be able to help those who have, for want of a better word, more "unique" requirements in their employment needs as previously the vast majority of people using the service were young, inexperienced and/or unqualified. Until recently, there had been no perceived need to cater for people who are either academically qualified, time served skill trades or highly experienced etc; now the job centre find themselves in a position where they cannot help those who need assistance in getting back into employment.

Edited by installspark

The advice I give in relation to benefits should be viewed as general advice and not specific to your individual claim circumstances. I cannot give specific advice on your claim as I cannot access the claim.

 

If you find the advice useful please click on my scales.

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So would I.

 

The main issue is that this person seems to be adverse to find jobs that I would be suitable for. She did once look at other jobs - all of which required qualifications or some skill that I did not have.

 

I'm not ruling the jobs out because they do not match what I want exactly. I do not want to work in call centres because they make me physically ill - they really stress me out. I do not want a sales job because I can't sell. I don't want a job where I will be asked to do something which contravenes the law (DCAs!) or restrict consumer rights. If I worked in a shop and a customer complained about faulty goods, I would go with what the law states and not what shop policy is. I simpy cannot function in that kind of environment.

 

And it's not just that. Employers in those fields simply do not want a graduate! Employers and a couple of reputable agencies have already told me this - one suggested I even do not mention the degree!

 

I have already had 4 jobs that I did not like and left - it took me a long time to realise I simply did not get on in call centers (a former team leader warned me and said I was "wasted" doing that type of work). That's why I went to uni. I did not do it to say "Ooh look at me I've got a degree". I did it to help get a career outside of call centers - a place that one seems to be stuck in once started.

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In my initial interview, I was chatting to the guy and asked him why claimants were now called customers. He couldn't really answer except to say that it sounded better than claimant.

 

 

This tactic was all part of the cheap psychology involved somewhere around the early 1990s (?)... in trying to shift the onus of responsibility away from the Gov. :cool:

 

Unemployment Benefit became Job Seeker's Allowance :rolleyes:.... implying that you were only allowed to have it if you sought work, rather than entitled to have it as a Benefit. Word play....

 

Similarly, Supplementary Benefit was morphed into Income Support.... implying that it was there to prop up some imaginary income that you already had :rolleyes:, instead of an amount that was previously intended to supplement an often huge gap in living costs that Unemployment Benefit wasn't covering.

 

The Gov. seemed to be in "lurve" with the word Choice at the time... and some bright spark must have thought that introducing it into the DWP language would successfully deviate attention away from entitlement and rights.... probably the same bright spark involved in the re-naming of the DWP in the first place (previously known as the Dept. of Social Security.... a concept that has long since disappeared).

 

Incapacity Benefit is now on their hit list, so it seems....

 

:rolleyes:

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I did it to help get a career outside of call centers - a place that one seems to be stuck in once started.

 

Know that feeling well, academically I'm trained as an electronics technician and a sparky. Couldn't find employment in those areas at the time as had no experience - the usual circle of can't get experience if can't get a job, can't get a job as haven't experience; ended up falling in to CS call centre work which I love to hate and hate to love.

 

Even if you apply for a vacancy with the DWP you are put into a waiting list if you are successful at interview, fortunately my advisor can see that I "technically" have a firm and accepted job offer, but am waiting for them to give a start date.

 

Anyways back to the job hunt.

The advice I give in relation to benefits should be viewed as general advice and not specific to your individual claim circumstances. I cannot give specific advice on your claim as I cannot access the claim.

 

If you find the advice useful please click on my scales.

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wel, if there is an advisor that is willing to help then id like to know why all of them arent the same?.

 

i mean at my jobcentre, they have posters up saying to ask about various things, but when you ask the advisors just look back at you blankly and say "er..dunno"...that isnt an acceptable answer.

i once asked one what his capacity was there, as in his job title, he replied he was a "customer service advisor", so i replied that if that was his job, then how come he wasnt able to advise a customer on a service that was being advertised by his employer...all i recieved back was another blank look and a drawn out "errrrrrrrr", even when i asked to speak to his manager, the MANAGER wasnt able to help either, but yet the sodding thing i was asking about was written on a poster not less than 6 feet away from me clearly stating "ask a member of staff for details" .

its pathetic, the jobcentre is a joke, the benefit system is a joke, and this country is going swiftly down the ****ter because the people in charge cant be arsed to spend that few extra quid to ensure the staff they employ are actually able to do their jobs and trained to provide whatever it is they are supposed to provide.

All tha matters is targets, targets, targets ****ing targets!!, each jobseeker gets 5 minutes of the "advisors" time (your appointment duration is actually written on your claim/signing pack, if youre eagle eyed enough to notice), in said time they quickly run through a memorised script and if theres any deviation from that then their entire system collapses, just because someone who has an IQ larger than their shoe size asks an intelligent question and quite reasonably expects an intelligent answer.

 

now im mad.

 

Used to have the same problems myself when I visited them. A fter the usual greeting of how is the Job Search going you feel like saying to them if I had found one I would not be here. But when you ask them to search for what they advertise on their walls, like what is this new deal for the over fiftys they do not know,where is this training that I can apply for? still a blank expression looks back at you, as if they are thinking I do not know what to do here I have got someone who can actually read English.

Should have them for misleading advertising.

My definition of a customer is a person who wishes to buy the product or service of a company so why Job Centre has the nerve to call you one I do not know maybe victim would be a better word:eek:

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I did it to help get a career outside of call centers - a place that one seems to be stuck in once started.

 

yeah, ive only ever worked in a "call centre" twice in my entire life, once for 7 months when i was 18 (12 years ago, this was the nazi-esque call centre i described earlier), and at BT for 3 months during the summer of 2007.

 

due to me having "call centre experience", employment agencies, and the dol office automatically pigeon hole me into the catagory of being a "call centre worker", even though i have more experience in working in admin and IT, hell, i was a postman for 2 and a half years, so why am i not pigeon hold into "postal worker"?.

 

Call centres are the sweat shops of the west, as they have completley incompatible objectives, ie, length of call AND quality of service, you simply CANNOT solve all problems within the 2 minute call time average, especially if the problem is intricate and the customer is irate.

Wages are extremly poor, morale is almost no nexistant, and more often than not you wil find teams of experienced workers being led by a team leader who is basically a kid and who has little or no life experience (never mind work experience!).

 

I simply cannot function in a call centre, their practices are too restrictive, too deceptive and offer absolutley zero chance for a worker to have any incentive to stay on past a years service, as career progression is practically non existant.

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