Today I got an email with some special offers from a marine store. As a keen sailor in the middle of sailing season, I was pleased to see a special offer on deck shoes. Nice copy, nice picture, good price. So I clicked on the link.
Peter,
Thank you for contacting us. This is an automated response sent to you in order to confirm the receipt of your message. We will attend to your ticket as soon as possible. We've listed the details of the ticket you created below for your records. When replying, please keep the ticket's ID in the subject to ensure that your replies are tracked correctly.
Ticket ID: JEO-265217
Subject: Wrong pricing. Mens shoe shows as £52.99 not the advertised price.
Department: General Enquiries
Priority: Low
Status: Open
You can check the status of or reply to this ticket online at: http://marinestore.co.uk/support/
Please use the following credentials when accessing your account with us:
Email: xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Password: xxxxxxxxx
Kind Regards,
Marinestore Chandlers
The text of the email could be better, but they did give me a way to check the status of my complaint online.

I feel that the above blog is rather unfair as it implies that Marinestore are being deliberately deceptive. The problem that you encountered was the result of a clerical error where during routine price checking and updates, the original, pre-sale price was restored erroneously. As soon as we were made aware of the problem it was fixed.
The question of message priority is quite straightforward - they are set to low so that they can be escalated if need be, it is difficult to downgrade a ticket after the event without annoying the customer. I find it hard to believe that our automated response was "the biggest slap in the face".
I note that this was posted prior to contact being made with the company. To make assumptions such as above without checking with the Company first is rather poor. Marinestore is rightly very proud of it customer service, we need our customers to be happy and the relationships long term.
People and by implication, organisations do make mistakes, it is how the errors are corrected that is important.
Posted by: John Lodge | 07/22/2009 at 07:44 PM
John believes I am being unfair, but I think that trust is extremely fragile on the web.
The question of message priority is quite straightforward and so is my interpretation. John finds it hard to believe. Well, believe it. I was annoyed.
John also says that this was posted prior to contact being made with the company. Not true. I told you about the error in an email. I couldn't have included your automated response if I hadn't made contact with you. What you meant was that I didn't phone you in your business hours. Nope. I didn't. Because the damage was done by then.
Posted by: Peter Davies | 07/23/2009 at 09:02 AM