social media : digital project management

Zipcar Listens to Customers

Wednesday I rented a Zipcar to get to a meeting. To those of you who haven’t heard of Zipcar they are an awesome rental car company that includes insurance, free gas and a bit of mileage with each rental.

For $50 a year and the cost of the rental I can rent a car, pick it up at the T station nearby and be ready to drive. It’s an awesome deal and I even have favorite cars.

I reserved the car, took the T to pick it up, and drove toward my destination. Once I got nearby I stopped to get lunch because I hadn’t eaten when I left the house. I took my cell, credit card, ID and Zipcard in with me and locked my computer and other items into the vehicle.

After lunch I came back out of the restaurant and when to unlock the door but the card wouldn’t work. I try again and again out of hopes that it’ll work once and I can get in but no. I called Zipcar’s customer service and report the problem. The rep isn’t able to unlock the car remotely nor is there a key on the undercarriage like she had hoped.

She informs me that she’ll have to call in an unlock and that I need to stay with the car until she gets someone there. In the end I waited through my meeting, until the tow truck came and then made my way back across down in disappointment. I wasn’t angry, just deeply disappointed that I hadn’t got to have the conversation I was looking for and that my reason for renting the car was to get to that meeting and it hadn’t been reliable as times before.

I called the Zipcar when I returned home. I spoke to a different representative. She told me that they had refunded the last hour they added on for me. She was polite but dismissive of the issues I had. After the call, I pondered what would make me feel valued as a customer. I wanted Zipcar to understand that my frustration was because that I had used relied on their service to get me where I needed to go. I did so in order to do my business more efficiently that day.

I wrote a letter to a senior exec at Zipcar explaining what had happened, much like this blog post, emphasizing the reliance on their service. How important it was to me as a business and how it failed this time around. Within 45 minutes, Member Services apologized and sent a full refund to my account. This was an awesome response time. Zipcar has shown that they aren’t afraid to take care of their customers when an unforeseeable issue happens. With the ease they present in renting cars, I’m happy to still be a customer.

  • zip car people how then take care
    of customers nice artical what they experimented
  • Diana
    I am glad that you got your money back, however, it seems that you wasted a lot of your personal time too, and they didn't compensate you for that. I think that it shouldn't take you writing to a senior exec to get an issue resolved. I used to work for Enterprise and we had a 1 call resolution policy, meaning that a customer didn't need to make more than one call to get an issue resolved. It was great, it made the customers very happy and it empowered the employees, resulting in it being the #1 Rental Company in the States. That's what it takes. And even though I do understand that issues occur, it is the way they are handled that makes the difference. I have had my share of problems with Zipcar, but would not be about to cancel my membership had those issues been resolved in a customer friendly manner. The people on the phone sound like miserable people with miserable lives; it makes me sad.
  • Alan, Anonymous,

    I'm sorry to hear that others have had horrible experiences with Zipcar. I can only speak for my own.

    -Chel
  • Anonymous
    http://carpundit.typepad.com/carpundit/2005/04/...

    These people have some horror stories that would convince me never to use Zipcar.
  • Zipcar has not been so honest with people on the peninsula south of SF.

    The SF Zip car office has repeatedly lied to small business customers about the pending availability of cars south of the city. Several emails and letters to the Zipcar headquarters in MA have led to nothing. One VP at Zipcar told me to 'let the issue go'.

    I finally got an employee at the SF office to admit that the company advises its field office employees to say anything to get the signup.

    It's a good service run by bad people at the top.
  • I love Boston public transport. I love riding the T, but haven't ever been to DC so I have no idea.

    It'd be cool if they had a way to remote unlock definitely better than this version but I'm happy with the response.
  • I am glad Zipcar responded quickly and set things right. I am sure they will work on a "OnStar" style method of unlocking the car.

    On a side note Boston public transport seems good . better than DC ?
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