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August 24, 2005 11:04 AM PDT

AOL agrees to customer service reform

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America Online agreed to pay $1.25 million to the state of New York and reform its customer service procedures, the state attorney general announced on Wednesday.

The agreement stems from consumers' complaints that AOL customer service representatives would either ignore requests, or make it unduly difficult, to cancel their service, according to a statement from Attorney General Eliot Spitzer. Spitzer said that an incentive system AOL had developed for its customer service representatives contributed to most of the actions that drew complaints.

"This agreement helps ensure that AOL will strive to keep its customers through quality service, not stealth retention programs," Spitzer said in a statement.

Under the agreement, AOL will no longer require its customer service representatives to meet a minimum quota for customer retention in order to receive a bonus. Previously, AOL would distribute bonuses in the "tens of thousands of dollars" if representatives were able to retain half the customers who called to cancel their service, according to the attorney general.

AOL has been under pressure for several years to shore up its declining subscriber base. The company's hold on dial-up customers has steadily declined as broadband service has ramped up, especially as competition in the broadband sector has heated up and subscriber prices have fallen.

The agreement also calls for AOL to have a third-party monitor to verify and record customer requests to continue their AOL service after a consumer had initially contacted AOL to cancel. AOL said it won't need to have a third-party monitor to record all calls. The new verification system will be introduced to certain call centers by January and all AOL call centers will have it in place by June, said Nicholas Graham, an AOL spokesman.

In addition to paying New York state $1.25 million in penalties and costs, AOL will also reimburse eligible New York consumers with a cash refund worth up to four months of service. Those consumers will have 120 days from Wednesday to fill out and submit a claim form necessary to collect their reimbursement.

The attorney general's office received approximately 300 complaints regarding AOL's customer service policies, according to Spitzer. Based on a dial-up account cost of $23.90 a month, AOL may pay at least $29,000 in refunds to New York consumers.

"The cost is secondary to doing right by our members," Graham said.

The investigation began in 2004 and reviewed cancellations going back to 2001, Graham said. He noted that AOL has cooperated fully during the investigation.

"AOL is pleased to reach an agreement with the state attorney general of New York," Graham said, adding that it enhances the relationship AOL has with a certain segment of its members.

New York's attorney general office is the second to pursue an investigation and agreement with AOL over customer care practices. Last April, the attorney general of Ohio concluded an 18-month investigation into AOL's customer care practices.

AOL paid $75,000 to the state of Ohio as part of its agreement, as well as some limited refunds to customers, Graham said. The issues involved areas such as the customer retention process, as well as billing and cancellation refunds.

See more CNET content tagged:
customer retention, Eliot Spitzer, America Online Inc., attorney general, customer service representative

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 4 comments
There's one option that works....
by Earl Benser August 24, 2005 11:51 AM PDT
I needed an AOL connection to test my web pages across the range
of browsers and services. AOL was notoriously a bit flakey at the
time, maybe still is. Anyhow, when I no longer needed the AOL
connection, I tried to cancel it vis customer service. After numerous
run-arounds with no progress, I simply quit calling customer
service and cancelled all further payment to AOL. AOL eventually
got the message (I think) and I haven't been bothered since.
Reply to this comment
Well this is fine if you live in New York...
by PCCRomeo August 24, 2005 2:15 PM PDT
But people in all the other states and countries for that matter are screwed by AOL, and what about them? The last time I had AOL it took me 30 minutes just to get them to cancel my subscription. Had they not I would have just stopped paying them, but I did that with Earthlink and they didn't cancel for 3 months (I couldn't contact their support team at all) so they turned me over to a collection agency. Have they gotten their payment yet? Nope...
Reply to this comment
2yrs trying to cancell
by sandyl October 29, 2005 3:03 PM PDT
well recental i found out that my mother-inlaw has been trying to cancel aol.
hea i bet your say what me to.
she has never ask for a comfermation # so needless to say she still got them.
think all most every month that this was takrn care of she would br over drawn every time the took payment from her account .
And as of right now she has not been canceled
Reply to this comment
by barabbas59 June 30, 2008 2:53 AM PDT
I've sent numerous email requests to AOL customer service representatives (that are located in one or more third world countries and speak in broken english) without a single reply? Their billing system sucks, their AOL News comment section sucks and their customer service representatives suck also. I'm currently researching other ISP inorder not to join another one that sucks like AOL. I'm paying for a service that has poor customer sewrvice (this is what happens, when American companies send jobs out of the US for cheap labor.
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