Shipping hassles with FEDEX


I purchased a used pair of Proac 1.5 speakers back in late June. The right speaker arrived with a small ding on top, exposing the particle board below the veneer. After contacting the seller, who maintained total ignorance, a damage report was filed with RPS, aka Fedex Ground. At the end of August, following a phone call to the whereabouts of a home inspection, finally a pick-up was scheduled. They took the speaker, in it's original box, promising return in about 5-7 days. Two weeks tto the day I began the hellish dealings with Fedex. Not only could they not locate my speaker, noone in the supervisorial depts. would return calls. Two and half weeks lapsed and finally the truck pulled up and dropped the speaker at my door. The box which was in "good" shape when it went out was now wrapped in tape. Torn throughout. I was livid. I lifted the box into the house and felt the speaker bang against the sides. Immediately, after phoning Fedex, Apromise to have things rectified was made. They told me to go ahead and open the carton that I would be compensated. The condition of this speaker, at one time in beautiful yew finish, looked like something delivered by a band of gorillas. Each corner and edge is now chipped. A complete embarrassment to acknowledge the lack of care and integrity. As of today, nearly 3 1/2 months later, this issue is not resolved. Any simlilar experiences? Any effective results? Thanks siddh
siddh

Showing 1 response by rayhall

Despite the horror that is supposed to be UPS Customer Service, I have only had problems with Fedex. My problem didn't have to do with damaged shipments, but with a misrouted shipment. I purchased NBS interconnects from another Audiogon member. In tracking the shipment, I could see that the shipment made it to NYC (its destination) but seemed headed back to the originator. To make a long story short, it took over 15 calls to Fedex Customer Service. Most of the customer service reps, after looking at the tracking history of the package, just hung up on me. This included even supervisors. Others transferred my call randomly within Fedex's internal phone network. I had so much of this type of difficulty, that it became clear that this is a pattern of their reps to deal with "difficult" cases in these ways. Finally, I was able to reach a manager of a Fedex dropoff office on Sunday, who informed me what was going on and she gave me the name and number of the manager of the Fedex warehouse to call on Monday. The package was placed on the wrong conveyor belt when it was removed from a truck in the NYC warehouse. This experience was a rude awakening concerning what passes for customer service today at Fedex and probably many other places.