This isn’t a post to thank Verizon. In fact, after 19 years with them, I’m more disappointed than anything. Quick story… AT&T has been our internet provider forever. They upgraded our… | Scott Youkilis | 22 comments

This isn’t a post to thank Verizon.

In fact, after 19 years with them, I’m more disappointed than anything.

Quick story…

AT&T has been our internet provider forever. They upgraded our neighborhood to fiber, sent a tech team, and—classic move—added a sales rep to the visit. One conversation later, I walked away with a mobile offer that cut my monthly bill by 45%. New phone, buyout on the old ones…hard to ignore.

I didn’t want to leave Verizon. I called them, gave them the offer, and asked if they could come close. After an hour on the phone?

Nothing. No effort. No counter. No curiosity. Just…shrugs.

So:
AT&T – signed.
Verizon – cancelled.

That’s when the real fun started.

All I wanted next was my final bill.

Week 1

Agent #1: “We’ll mail it.”

Mail?

As in, the thing delivered by a person, not a computer?

Apparently yes.

And to pay? I needed to physically go to a Verizon store and write a check.

Am I living in 2025 or 1925?

Week 2

No bill.

Week 3

Two more agents. Same script. “We’ll rush it.”

Three days later…they charged my account automatically—for the bill I still couldn’t see.

They did email a link, but it didn’t work because my account was now closed. Perfect.

Week 4

Agent #4 assures me the bill is coming.

“It already came out of my bank account!” I say.

“We’ll mail it,” they reply—as if this is the twist that makes things better.

Today, it finally arrived.

I genuinely felt something I haven’t felt in a decade: excitement to open my mailbox.

A large envelope. Could it be…The Final Bill?!

Reader, it was.

Here’s the punchline:

I was a 19-year customer.

I would have paid MORE to stay if Verizon had simply tried, asked a question, made a gesture, acted like loyalty mattered.

But loyalty wasn’t part of the playbook. Just the script.

Takeaway for every business leader, operator, restaurateur, salesperson, and founder in my network:

Customers don’t leave because you raise prices.

They leave when you stop listening.

They leave when loyalty becomes a one-way street.

They leave when staying feels harder than switching.

Great companies don’t win on product alone—they win on effort, empathy, and the feeling they create.

Anyone else have a Verizon war story?

Or am I just the guy standing at the mailbox cheering for envelopes? 🤦

Next battle: AT&T reimbursements…stay tuned. 🤺


Publié

dans

par

Étiquettes :