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Report: #264895

Complaint Review: AUDATEX - Ann Arbor Michigan

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  • AUDATEX AVIS FARMS, 880 Technology Drive Ann Arbor, Michigan U.S.A.

AUDATEX AKA Claims Services Group The most toxic management ever Ripoff Ann Arbor Michigan

*UPDATE EX-employee responds: My experience with the call center was similar

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This is a long report that I hope you will read with interest, because it outlines my point of view and what I have witnessed during my 10 months of employment at the Ann Arbor Audatex Call Center.

You are free to dismiss my comments as if they were to come from the usual petty rant of a 'disgruntled employee' or you can read it and judge for yourself. Let it be known that I have never written anything like this before, knowing full well that there are a lot of good people working at the Ann Arbor location.

Within my first week of employment I was put on the phone queue to answer clients' support issues ranging from software installations to automotive parts repair questions, which most TSR's don't know anything about unless they are the experts.

Since I have started my employment with Audatex, I consistently applied the highest standards in Customer Service and went above-and-beyond the call of duty regarding what I call 'Wowing the Customer.'

Within a few weeks, I would find it increasingly unreasonable to keep up with management's demands to keep the calls within 9 minutes. Nine Minutes barely gets you to "Hello, how are you and what is the problem?"

After a coupe of months my supervisor tells me that I was late 1 minute during my fifteen minute break and two minutes late during my 30 minute lunch another day of another month. That was shocking. They couldn't possibly be serious!! Yes they were!!

My supervisor one day came to my desk to also tell me to refrain from eating together with my colleague; reason being we were the only two French-speakers and one of us had to be on the phones in case there were bilingual calls. I couldn't believe it. What had I done wrong now??

My coworker and I would find it really ridiculous and petty since lunch wasn't even paid for and if we had to apply the same principle to the English speakers, then we would never go to lunch!!

After fighting it over, we grudgingly complied, with the expressed promise that we would be able to eat together as soon as two other bilingual hires would start. That would end up to be a lie.

The supervisors hired two bilingual TSR's. One very young and inexperienced. Another one who was already set to leave within a few weeks. The new hire told me she told the supervisors that she was waiting for another job to come through. She also told me she was surprised they still hired her, knowing full well that in the next 3 weeks she would be gone. I am wondering how much time and money was spent training this new TSR. It turns out the managers do not really care about that.

Shortly after the two TSR's came up to speed, everyone gets called into a meeting for the new Adherence Policy' on breaks and lunches. It turns out they reneged on their original statement that my coworker and I could have our breaks and lunch together. Now all breaks are scheduled at certain times and so are lunches. All of us four TSR have been conveniently put on a scaled 30 minute interval between each other. The result is that everyone still eats alone every 30 minutes.

The managers' behavior exhibited during the past few months regarding discouraging joint lunches or breaks with fellow co-workers, with a later written promise that once additional hires were made, that they would be allowed, I found it particularly questionable, since all of that would never manifest itself.

I have over 14 years of experience in international technical support, customer service and consulting and at no time in my career have I experienced such hostile environment at the detriment of employees (and customers) who want quality as being part of their work' but wait! There's more!

The new policy on 'Scheduled' breaks and lunch schedules are now being counted as being 'in adherence' without truly taking into account that a TSR may have been on a call longer than anticipated. This is particularly true during busy times. The call taken by the TSR ensures that the customer is being taken care of and satisfied that his/her issue is being resolved up to and until the customer ends the call. This should not be considered as 'non'adherence', but should be taken into account that the TSR either took an extra call or the call went beyond the TSR's scheduled break/lunch.

There are many other factors not taken into account, specifically when a client requests a certain number of claims/assignments/estimates to be re-assigned. Many times the client will not stay on the line and the process involved with the claim number search, the log id number, switching from one screen to another (not to mention the effort from the TSR to provide 'quality' resolution) can take some time away from the queue. I have found many times that to perform those tasks during particularly 'busy' times, it is discouraged by management, preferring instead to have the TSR forego the customer's request at a later time and take another call instead. If a TSR asks to be put on Project, it will be discouraged in favor of preferring the TSR take another call from the queue. To me this is not what I call a quality-driven technical support.

Another challenging instance during 'busy' times is the ever-increasing practice of putting the TSR's out of 'wrap up' time 2 minutes after a call has ended. I find it particularly disruptive when there is a call that needs accurate documentation in the Remedy CRM database, at times slow and unresponsive, erroring out, crashing, slowing down, or not responding, and having to add a new solution because there is no solution listed, the solution listed simply does not help close the call because it doesn't register when you select 'save & new to move to a new screen and onto another call.

All said and done, I believe I have just described fifteen to twenty minutes of wrap up time (not including the nine minutes of suggested call duration), and not to mention the instant message from team leads or supervisors wondering why you are still in wrap-up time and not on another call Managements decision to 'encourage' their TSR's to take breaks at their scheduled times in reality is in conflict with the quantity of calls and their abilities to meet queue wait times.

The TSR's primary goal is to provide quality technical support to clients who are calling in for assistance. Management may say they agree with that philosophy but in reality the quality suffers daily. The quality is quantified' without taking into account of the effort undertaken by some TSR's who are truly committed to provide that quality which will make the customer happy and potentially recommend the Audatex products and services brand to other potential customers.

Those metrics do not provide an accurate read on the TSR's or the department 'numbers' at large, but instead further confuse the procedures. It would be curious to know the reasons for not getting a full 100% daily compliance adherence, when every break and lunch I have taken has been taken on-time, without delay, and within the limits imposed.

I have observed that management has not always been 'in adherence' with the procedures outlined. Several times when TSR's would ask for a particular permission, whether to adjust their own 'schedule adherence' for a break, lunch, project time, or time allocation for a special project, non-response or delaying and stalling was employed by asking to wait longer and get back in the queue, before being granted that particular permission. That is particularly negative reinforcement and does not promote a positive level of trust between management and its employees. Furthermore, I find that there is a significant opportunity for management to empower TSR's, liaisons, and team leads and promote a more trustworthy environment. There seems to be a wall of separation when it comes for management to communicate with their employees. To continue that trend, Some TSR's were never formally introduced to their co-workers; either personally or via e-mail and some never even met their managers to this day.
I consider it outrageously self-defeating the fact that you have to wait 10 minutes in a chat room to get permission for your own 15 minute break. This has happened on more that one occasion.

I found it absolutely outrageous that one of my coworkers hadn't even met or had ever been introduced to his supervisor until his monthly review. To me that is complete lack of respect and demonstrates how unimportant employees are considered.

The weekly/daily evaluations on calls and tickets are a good tool to improve and better oneself. Unfortunately, I have noticed that a few employees may have received some repeatedly and noticeably 'biased' evaluations that I would deem to be 'over the top.' An example of an 'over-the-top' evaluation criticism was that the word 'battery' should be written with two t's and not three. An unfair, petty and ridiculous comment on the part of the evaluator, knowing full well that the TSR's go through 30-50 calls per day and there's bound to be typographical errors. Others will get low scoring because they have accents or English may not be their native language.

From what I heard and witnessed , there seems to be some 'unwritten rules' regarding granting (or denying) vacation time. This is not what I call really motivating for employees who look forward to spend the few days they have to reinvigorate themselves and be motivated to return to work. The incidence of denying, or stalling by management to grant vacation time if only a small number of employees are absent is unacceptable. This is so aggravating and problematic to many those in order to get their PTO with the least questioning; employees have scheduled their days off one, two years in advance.

Morale is really low because no matter what is suggested by the employees, nothing will ever change. You are praised one day for a job well done, given a warning the next second, and unceremoniously dismissed the next nothing counts, nothing is counted and if there is an excuse to dismiss someone, it will be found to justify that dismissal. If management were truly listening and trusting of their employees, they would make some positive changes.
Having pizza and popcorn on 'employee appreciation Friday' or a one-day crash course on Six-Sigma Principles s not a cure-all for what truly ails this organization.

With every passing week, rules are never permanent and ever changing. The main rule seems to be getting the client off the queue and finished as soon as possible and move to the next without regards of having provided quality to the customer. I wonder what the next months will be like.

Tasks sent via e-mail are not standardized as they should be (in my opinion, they should be created and sent via Remedy to improve call-tracking and save time).
The minimum information that team leads should provide are: Customer full name, customer id, phone number; which is not always the case. There has been some improvement as of late due to persistently asking for the same information from the Team Leads. Lack of that information contributed in the difficulty of tracking Remedy tickets, since some were logged under the field rep. name and some under the company actually needing assistance. This is not the way calls should be handled because it will lead to confusion and possible unnecessary duplication of tickets. When the TL's receive a call from a field rep. who received a call from a company, we should insist on receiving complete information regarding that specific customer (and not log it under the field rep).

As yet new procedures and rules have been implemented, such as the 2 minute automatic wrap-up-to- ready mode (as soon as the client hangs up, TSR's have 2 minutes time to finish saving their call history on the Remedy database and the next call comes in automatically) If a client requests a shipment of some sort, and doesn't stay on the line and hangs up, this requires project time, for the sake of accuracy, which will be denied during busy times.

I have been told several times by management (to my disbelief) to disregard the clients' request and move on to the next call, when a customer requests 5 or 10 or 20 claims to be requeued from our host system. The thought process is that it should be the insurance dispatchers who do that and not the helpdesk.

I and others have observed supervisors unprofessional behavior many times especially after conducting interviews with potential candidates. I and others have witnessed several times comments on peoples' physical appearances, which would make wonder what kind of off-the-wall comment they said about each and every one of us. The supervisors seem to be accountable to no one.

When I was first contacted for an interview, I was told the pay was not what it was but was less than advertised (that should have been a warning sign'). When I was first hired I received very little information on the hiring process, my 'welcome package was scarcely equipped with all the necessary information. One of my co-workers received completely different information and we even had to exchange it among each other to get the complete information we needed. There was never an e-mail welcoming me to the organization either, which in my experience was quite odd.

Approximately last March I was summoned by the supervisor regarding some calls that I had received and that were interrupted. Apparently management came to the foregone conclusion that I had purposefully and knowingly hung up on incoming customers. Nothing could be further from the truth. They had their records, their times to the split-second and outlined all the calls that they deemed at fault. Judge, jury, trial and guilty verdict was automatically delivered. That was outrageous. I had faulty equipment the whole time. Which was proved by finally being able to change the actual phone line to my headset, and they wanted to know immediately from me if I had hung up on a customer etc.

I have alerted all the Team Leads and the supervisors EVER SINCE and in good faith!!!

Months later, exactly three days ago, after an extremely busy day on the phone I get summoned in the supervisor's office. The reason is 'for a very serious offense that was committed at exactly 9:01 am, Tuesday July 31st. blah blah blah' I have no conscious idea what they are talking aboutbut apparently the have audio and they accuse me of hanging up on an Allstate customer who just happens to have called an anonymous Audatex Vice-President. The call was traced to me and so they are terminating me for hanging up on that customer. My supervisor accused me of not calling the customer back. How could I know who called me back, since the Remedy pop-up caller ID did not show the number??

I've alerted anyone and everyone, every time I thought I inadvertently hung up on a caller and did so in a very honest and open fashion. Why would I purposefully not say anything?? That makes no sense.

The only sense everyone has made of all of this chaos is that management has been after me and set me up for a fall; just waiting for the right moment, for anything really' My firing was deided a while ago and the excuse was just that! Especially when one of my other coworkers had a similar run-in and tiold them point-blank that they can fire him if they don't like the way he works.

As a result of all this painful experience, within a seven-month period, the bilingual French support TSRs have been reduced by approximately 75%, with only one TSR full time and another one remote part-time. I wonder how long it will be before there won't be any bilingual French support at Audatex Ann Arbor, which is already facing quite a challenge in hiring bilinguals, since word gets around in this tight community.

I sincerely hope someone will make some major cultural and organizational changes at the Ann Arbor location, because at this moment, I cannot truly and in good conscience recommend Audatex as a place of employment to anyone.


Sincerely,

Audatoxic
Ann Arbor, Michigan
U.S.A.

This report was posted on Ripoff Report on 08/02/2007 03:39 PM and is a permanent record located here: https://www.ripoffreport.com/reports/audatex/ann-arbor-michigan-48108/audatex-aka-claims-services-group-the-most-toxic-management-ever-ripoff-ann-arbor-michigan-264895. The posting time indicated is Arizona local time. Arizona does not observe daylight savings so the post time may be Mountain or Pacific depending on the time of year. Ripoff Report has an exclusive license to this report. It may not be copied without the written permission of Ripoff Report. READ: Foreign websites steal our content

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#1 UPDATE EX-employee responds

My experience with the call center was similar

AUTHOR: Formeradp - (U.S.A.)

POSTED: Wednesday, January 14, 2009

I worked for the San Ramon call center on the shop side from the late '90s to the mid-2000s, before ADP sold its Collision Repair division to Audatex. The conditions you describe, while not identical to those I experienced, sound strikingly familiar.

The focus was all on how many calls you can take in a day, not how well you resolved them. There was a period where they seemed to get away from it for a little while, but that didn't last long. There was also a brief flirtation with using call resolution metrics, but that too was short-lived, as they went back to the easy solution of treating every call as being 1) discrete and 2) exactly like another. The result, of course, is that taking the time to actually fix someone's issue made you look bad, while slapping on a partial fix that resulted in them calling back later actually made you look good--and management was watching closely, so it didn't pay to go the extra mile with our customers.

I never met a company that talked so much about superior service yet disregarded it so thoroughly in practice. "World Class Service" was the actual theme of the first annual kickoff I attended, yet the feedback I received, immediately and consistently, when I got back to the call center was that I wasn't taking enough calls per day.

You're right about nine minutes being just the intro portion of most calls; our limit was longer, but then there's more troubleshooting involved on the shop side than on the insurance side. Management would become especially sensitive about "Why does it take 19 minutes to resolve a call?" when wait times were long. But when a client's just waited fifteen minutes* on hold for someone to pick up, they *want* you to spend 19 minutes with them. Hustling them off the phone doesn't do the company's image any favors at a time like that.

* Not an exaggeration: wait times often reached half an hour when we were busy.

Nice to know they're still holding popcorn day. They started the pizza thing back in late 1998 when Development put out a monthly update full of bugs and the call center was under siege by customers for six months solid. Because the call center was suddenly hit by double its normal call volume, of course, it was blamed for the calls that came in, and punished for them. Corporate logic, no?

This company forced out one of the best managers I'd ever had, and replaced her with the worst manager I've ever had, whose reputation preceded him. He inherited a talented team and systematically ruined its morale and synergy. (I realize this happened at ADP, but Audatex acquired the call center management from ADP and its style seems to have changed very little since.)

Somewhat like your situation, I was set up to take the blame for a failed project. To be fair, circumstances were such that the numbers made me look bad, which did make me a natural target. Also I can't say I couldn't have handled it better. But in short I was being pushed under a bus for something I had minimal control over, and that shouldn't happen at any well-run company.

As bad as ADP could be, it seems Audatex is even harsher. When Development at ADP put out a bad monthly CD that caused a half-year spike in the call volume, the call center was blamed for it, accused, sanctioned, and forced to make some humiliating changes. But some time after I left, a CD was sent out with a bad database release, and the call center was hit hard again. This time Audatex was in charge, and its way of handling the situation was to close the entire San Ramon call center, terminating all employees there (and in the process erasing the institutional memory of that call center). Customer service at its finest!

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