I've been promised the money returned to my account this afternoon, all bank charges refunded and £50 of QVC credits......
Snowstorm, i was in the same postion re easi-pays a few months or so ago and have started keeping a note(i bought a small notebook in Asda -29p) i take a note when i buy and how many easi-pays are involved, i tick off when the money is taken from my account - this also encourages me to check my account. So sorry to read about Graham and co's situation re double payments being taken - i hope all is sorted out and QVC reimburse re any sundry payments(bank charges etc). For such a big organisation this sort of thing should never happen - please please everybody check your accountsxx
I have to say I'm also slightly concerned as I've always trusted QVC to just take the payment for easy pays as agreed - ashamed to say,that I don't keep such a close eye,that I possibly should.This has really put me off using easypay.
Should this thread be stickied so that it doesn't get lost in the middle of the other threads?
This is rather important, and could well affect many ST users.
Just a thought!
Just checked my bank account and I have been charged twice for lip glosses that I ordered last week. Just off phone and they said they are aware of the problem and should be fixed in next few days. Luckily it is not a large amount of money but just enough to knock me into overdarft if not fixed soon, boo!!
What I find interesting about all this is that it's supposed to have happened on the 12th, potentially impacting on easy payments up to the 15th: yet I don't remember any messages being given by QVC either on screen or online to say that there had been problems with their accounting system.
Neither did QVC stop the easy pay system while they investigated, potentially ensuring more and more customers had duplicate payments taken from them.
Is THIS good customer service? To know that your accounting system is not taking payments correctly, but to keep on going regardless?
If people had not been proactive and contacted QVC directly about this today (and please bear in mind that today is the 17th - 5 days after things started going wrong), would QVC have done anything about this at all?
This is not a minor matter. Regardless of the amounts involved, QVC is breaking its sales contracts with its customers if it decides to take more money for products than customers have agreed to pay.
We all make mistakes, but QVC should be announcing problems with payments as soon as they occur, not just owning up when customers query them. I wouldn't trust them to boil a kettle, never mind run a proper accounting system.
Ah now this is where things differ from realtime. I'm not defending QVC here just speaking from experience from the back end .
Given that the problems lie in easypay not one-off's the chances are that the payments are processed in a batch. That may or may not be in QVC's control and depending on the time of the batch run, that may not show up for several hours. For example if the payment is done at 10pm then the problem will probably be noticed the next day when either the customer complains or when the staff get the reports the next morning. You know the ones where your card isn't valid etc.
Now, given that a fault has been recorded let's say a group of people are fixing the underlying issue and ready for the next batch run the following evening. The fix fails and another fix is attempted till, which it seems is 3 times before its called to a halt. Then because of SLA's the refund process isn't immediate and may be caused by the credit card company or other factors in returning what seems to them legitimate requests. I'll add at this point that because there is a working process in place to refund, someone may have made the decision to continue the run as the risk unfortunately isn't theirs at this point in time. Conversely, the problem may be with the processor and QVC is taking the flack.
As for stopping the system, I'd disagree. It may be the case that the actual fault is a dodgy character somewhere that the parsing system doesn't know how to cope with. And yes, I do fault finding with data issues like this and believe me, a space or a full stop can break the system because somewhere along the line it hasn't been dealt with properly and sometimes, its just a one-off. Not eliminating human, computer issues/IT infrastructure either. On occasion, it can take days to find the source which can be caused by a small change on the system. I digress slightly but we wouldn't make a UK wide announcement saying we've got a failure and stop everything till we fix it as the affected user base is known. If we did that we'd destroy our reputation let alone the client who has to deal with impact!