Why Mega-Corporations Fail at Customer Experience?
You’re nothing — not even worth an answer from a Mega-Corporation’s customer service. Have you ever felt the same?
By Mega-Corporation, I mean a global player that practically holds a monopoly in its field. Not all Mega-Corporations fail at customer service. Many have perfected their systems so well that customers can manage everything themselves. Most of the time, these services work almost flawlessly. But when they don’t…
Recently, I had three experiences where the service utterly failed.
Case 1: When Usability and Customer Promise Don’t Match
I get especially frustrated when the service promise doesn’t align with actual usability. These situations do happen, but when customer service can’t solve the problem or even take responsibility, my patience ends.
I had booked a hotel for two nights with the right to modify or cancel until the day of arrival. Due to a change in travel plans, I wanted to shorten my stay to one night. However, since the hotel was fully booked, the booking system wouldn’t allow the modification.
Finding the customer service number took quite a while (common, right? “Customer, don’t contact us” is often the message). The agent tried to fix the issue but said she couldn’t. She promised to contact the hotel and get back to me. I waited 24 hours — nothing.
I called again, this time reaching the international service in English. An overly polite agent promised to help and sent me a long, flowery email full of words but no substance. Then — silence.
I contacted the hotel directly. The manager advised me to cancel the two-night booking and rebook one night — now at a higher price. She said she had asked the booking company to honor the original price, but two weeks later (and while I was already staying there) she still hadn’t received a reply.
I then sent a polite complaint email to customer service. The automated reply told me to call their UK number: “We’re waiting for your call.”
After returning home, I called again. A sweet agent “served” me but when I asked to speak to someone responsible for handling my complaint, she kept asking me to repeat the details. I just wanted to know who I could discuss it with. The call went nowhere.
What I wanted was a solution, not polite platitudes. Another observation: agents should be trained to understand cultural differences in what good service means. In Nordic Europe, repeating “Ms [Name]” with flowery phrases doesn’t help — it irritates.
I had previously rated the agents poorly (1/5) but decided to give this agent a chance. I emailed both her (via general service) and the company’s European CEO in the Netherlands. Finding his name naturally took time and his email I guessed. No response within 24 hours, so I wrote again, stating I would contact Consumer Rights Authorities by week’s end. I got a call.
This time, the agent — or her superior — was someone I could finally have a reasonable conversation with. I didn’t even need to ask for compensation for the price difference (€30); they offered it immediately.
But was that enough? Not really. It covered the system’s mistake, but not the frustration, wasted time, or poor experience. To make it worse, they added the credit to my account for future bookings — as if I wanted to use their service again.
Yes, they solved the issue. But they didn’t fix the experience. Guess if I will recommend the booking company.
Case 2: When a Corporation Shows Zero Empathy
We purchase annual licenses essential for our business from a Mega-Corporation. A misunderstanding led us to pay far more than expected, a significant sum for us, but pocket change for them.
Since all meetings were recorded, we requested the recording to understand how the miscommunication happened. Conveniently, it “couldn’t be found.”
Yet, the company still demanded full payment and on time.
Mega-Corporations don’t make mistakes. They don’t need to see things from the customer’s point of view. You dance to their tune; take it or leave it.
Case 3: When the Consumer Is Left to Fix It
I tried to buy a flight ticket online, but at the payment step, I kept getting a notification: “Please contact your bank.” I did and received prompt confirmation that my card was fine.
I then reached out to the airline via WhatsApp. The chat was quick but unhelpful. A few days later, at 5 AM on a Saturday, I got a call. The agent tried to process the booking, but at payment, she said: “There’s a problem with your card. Sorry, can’t help.” The 15-minute international call cost almost as much as the flight.
After digging through their website, I discovered the issue: the airline doesn’t accept euros. What international airline refuses to sell tickets in euros but accepts all other major currencies?
Thankfully, I had friends abroad who eventually bought the ticket for me.
Why Such Arrogance?
Mega-Corporations are imperious because they can afford to be. Their customer base is so vast that losing a few clients means nothing. They’ve built nearly flawless digital systems, which is cheaper to maintain than dealing with service failures. Makes sense.
But when those systems fail, customers like me fall through the cracks. And I’m not alone. With years of professional and personal experience in customer experience, I find this pattern troubling and it tricks me to react.
I give presentations about customer experience and in one of them I feature a local shoemaker who didn’t care about his customers. I’ll pardon him and exchange his story with these Mega-Corporation examples by adding their exact logos.
Learn the Lesson
No matter how big or powerful your company is ensure your service is usable and seamlessly designed and, in case of incidents, empower your customer service to solve them.
Don’t be a cocky sucker.