Bait and switch?
Been a Cox subscriber a little over a year now. Moved into a brand new apartment community that was pre-wired for Cox services. The apartment came with a modem that will ultimately transfer to the next renter after I'm gone. I'm a simple user and only need internet, and nothing extreme either. I'm not a gamer or doing anything requiring super fast upload or download speeds. My first year as a subscriber I was paying $70.00 per month for the "Internet Preferred 250" plan. After the year the cost went up to $90.00 per month. I recently had a service need and logged into my Cox account for the first time in ages and I discovered that other plans exist. Upon my search I discovered a plan that, lo and behold, is the EXACT same plan as the one I'm currently subscribed to. It's even called"Internet Preferred 250" plan, with not one single difference in services offered. Same download speed of up to 250 Mbps, same upload speed of up to 250 Mbps, same being ideal for 5-7 devices, and same included data of 1.25 TB per month. But guess what, it's only $70.99 per month!!! What's the catch? The catch is you need to have a tech come out to your residence and change your modem for a fee of a $100.00.I mean really, it requires a new modem for the EXACT same service? This seems deceptive and feels wrong to me. Am I being unreasonable thinking this smells rotten to the core?1.9KViews0likes11CommentsCox cheating it customers.
I never ever got the internet speed I paid for, I am always pushed to get a higher and higher speed but COX deliver a 3rd world country like internet. currently paying for a 50MB speed but all I get is 2MB of download. many people have been complaining about this issue and nothing was done and after speaking with the support many time it sound like cox is just cheating its customers because they know the majority of them don't really know what's a 50MB speed looks like or check their internet speed so they get away with it.1.5KViews1like6CommentsDishonest Billing Right from the Start
On December 10 th , 2019, I set up a plan under the Preferred 150 internet service with Cox. The plan for the internet was going to be 12 months at $49.99, plus $10.99 for the Gateway. While I was finalizing the plan, I was put on hold and the call disconnected. When I called back, I was connected to a different representative who finalized the plan for me. Shortly after that, I got a confirmation email reaffirming the plan of $49.99 plus $10.99 a month (which I have in writing). However, when I saw my first bill on December 15 th , I noticed that I am being charged $59.99 per month plus the $10.99 for the gateway, so the internet service itself went up by ten dollars. I’m suspecting that the price was different because I had gotten cut off of the original call and someone else finalized the sale. On December 18 th , 2019, I contacted an agent on the chat feature on Cox’s website thinking this would be a quick fix. This person was very unhelpful After sitting with that person for over an hour, she told me that I would have to contact the loyalty department. On December 19 th , 2019, I contacted the loyalty department and explained all of this. That person connected me to the sales department to see if they could fix the issue. Sales could not fix the issue, so they bounced me back to the loyalty department. When I talked to the third person in the loyalty department, she said she would have to send this problem to the back office and that someone would contact me within 48 hours. On December 27 th , 2019, I still had not heard a response, so I contacted the loyalty department again. After much discussion, the representative said that the back office had denied the claim from December 19 th . I asked to speak to her supervisor, Joe, who reaffirmed that the back office denied the claim and offered me a $20 coupon for my first month's bill. Furthermore, he insisted that there was no one else I could talk to about this issue to try and resolve it. It is completely unprofessional to have offered me a rate of one price, only to change the price just five days later. I do not believe any of the representatives when they tell me that the price cannot be changed. It got changed once, it can be changed again. Either I was lied to when I originally set up the service, or these representatives are lying to me. Either way, Cox is being dishonest. This is entirely unacceptable.525Views0likes1CommentYour support agents via Live Chat service are lying to me.
I opened a chat this afternoon with a support agent to ask about a problem with a particular Wi-Fi hotspot that I've been using for the last year or so. The agent told me that the hot spot was undergoing maintenance. I informed the agent that the problems have been ongoing for about 2 weeks then the agent told me it was only reported yesterday. So I asked the agent why the hotspot with still visible and why I could see a signal coming from it if it was undergoing maintenance, wouldn't a hotspot that's undergoing maintenance be offline? No I was told that you could still connect to it so that brought me back to my original problem: why can't I connect to this hotspot that I've been using regularly for a year and I'm in the same exact spot and nothing has changed other than the fact that this hotspot is got a very weak signal coming from it? I was assured that technicians are working on it but there would be no estimated time that it would be fixed. So being skeptical with that answer I opened a chat with another agent. This time I started by asking if there were any known problems with Wi-Fi hotspots in the zip code where I'm at. This agent took some time and then came back with an address that was different from the address where I am. A completely different hotspot. So I then asked the agent if that was all the problem hot spots within that zip code and ask if there were any more. Well at that point the agent had cut off the conversation. I believe that the agent knew that he was caught in a lie. I see a pattern where support agents give answers based on the information that I give them and tailor their responses to avoid admitting things that make Cox look bad or that are embarrassing for Cox. And this pattern isn't anything new. I've experienced it several times in the past and it's been for the same exact issue, although not the same location but the same issue. So a few hours later I opened up a chat with a third agent. This agent told me that there were NO reports of a problem with the hot spot that I had mentioned to the first. So let's review here: agent #1 and agent #2 both told me that the hotspot was undergoing maintenance and agent #1 also told me that a customer reported a problem with it yesterday. The third agent told me that there were no reports of problems with the hotspot. Then when I mentioned that the versions of the situation that I was receiving we're not matching up between different agents the third agent attempted to do some damage control by some type of vague answer that made it sound like some agents have some information and other agents have their information and that they don't all necessarily draw from the same information. Can you see why I am extremely unhappy with the abysmal service that I'm getting? Why would anyone continue to do business with a company that's clearly training their people to lie to customers? I'm trying to think of one good reason why I should not close my account today1.7KViews1like2CommentsWhy am I receiving 35% of the advertised bandwidth with an Alienware and Cisco router. Not equipment!
Same complaint since installed. I've overcome all objections... new cabling, new router, and even a rocksold $7k laptop to take it into the end field. Still.... I do a fastwalk 44Mbs while paying for a 150Mb connections. Enough with the "it must be the customer's fault!" Deliver what you say you are delivering, or let the rest of these guys know the real deal, and come off the high horse empty promises.2.2KViews0likes2Comments