Friday, April 19, 2024

Don’t bother emailing AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson because you’ll hear from a lawyer

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Businesses like to say that they are actively listening to customers. At AT&T, CEO Randall Stephenson apparently bucks the trend. The carrier’s leader doesn’t want to here from customers, plain and simple. If you do contact him directly with an email, you better be ready for a lawyer representing AT&T to contact you. That’s exactly what happened to Alfred Valerie, an AT&T customer that sent Stephenson suggestions on how to improve customer satisfaction. Notice the message, found after the break, included suggestions and not criticisms.

Here is what Valerie, a self-proclaimed “lifelong customer” of AT&T, sent Stephenson:

“Hi. I have two suggestions. Please do not contact me in regards to these. These are suggestions. Allow unlimited data for DSL customers, particularly those in neighborhoods not serviced by U-verse. Bring back text messaging plans like 1,000 Message for $10 or create a new plan like 500 Messages for $7.

Your lifelong customer, Alred Valerie”

The message was forwarded to the legal department of AT&T where Chief Intellectual Property Counsel Thomas A. Restaino took over. After thanking Valerie for being a longtime customer, Restaino refused to acknowledge any suggestions with this very official statement:

“AT&T has a policy of not entertaining unsolicited offers to adopt, analyze, develop, license or purchase third-party intellectual property … from members of the general public.

Therefore, we respectfully decline to consider your suggestion.”

An AT&T spokesperson told LA Times reporter David Lazarus that the carrier has run into a issues where customers claim that their ideas were stolen. That is why Valerie’s suggestions were declined to even be considered by Stephenson and AT&T. It just seems odd that AT&T would do this when nothing legally protected is being offered.

Who else is in an uproar over the matter? None other than T-Mobile CEO John Legere. Team Magenta now has a hub ready for AT&T customers to drop off their suggestions.

In case you forgot, Legere is constantly going after Stephenson and other executives in the wireless industry.

Really, don’t email Randall Stephenson at [email protected]. T-Mobile customers, though, can feel free to send John Legere as many emails as they’d like at this address: [email protected]. Either Legere himself or someone from his camp will respond.

Source: Los Angeles Times

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