• Fun with Amazon.com
    • Ganglioneuroma: Rarest and most benign
    • It's done
    • Fun with Yelp...
    • That's no moon...
    • Online classes
    • Insert your getting stoned joke here
    • The new Gmail look and feel...
    • Garmin 60Csx vs Oregon 450
    • Our 2011 Apple Harvest
    • Expense report
    • Hard Drive Destruction
    • It's the small things...
    • Random passwords
    • Cherry Dutch Baby
    • The paperless office needs a paperless toilet
    • Cilantro-pistachio pesto pesto, rice and beans
    • My first iPhone hide
    • Yeast Waffles
    • Seiko battery replacement
    • Nikon D40 won't power up
    • Mapnificent
    • Geocache Queries
    • iPhone 4 travel map
    • I'm Here To Put You Back On Schedule
    • Disruptive technologies
    • Fraud alert
    • Cleaning between the door glass of a Frigidaire oven
    • Snap, Crackle and Pop
    • Dolphin Kick
    Squeaky clean AmEx card Conference calls

    Travel agents

    By jim On 23 January 2007 · Leave a Comment · In travel

    Sometime tomorrow, you may hear something that sounds like a tennis ball can being opened very, very slowly. It won’t be a new trio of tennis balls, but rather a can of whoop-ass. And I will be opening it before I chew out a travel agent. Susan Dennis style.

    As part of meeting our corporate “stretch” milestone, everyone in the company was given a choice among a voucher worth $X towards travel booked through a specific travel agency, $0.75X in the cash equivalent, or, for the whiners, $0.00X, offering the benefit of being unencumbered by taxes or the urgency to consume it by the end of fiscal year 2007. I took the $X option.

    After browsing Travel Agency’s Web Site, hereafter referred to as “TAWS,” I had a strong suspicion I would be much better at finding deals on the commodity items, especially after booking my most recent business trip. Furthermore, I noticed that TAWS was locked into some exclusive offerings. For example, for rental cars, they only show Hertz, a fine unit of frequency, but for rental cars, 2X what I can find elsewhere.

    Monday at 1pm, I called the designated travel agent contact with an itinerary. I get her voice mail and leave a message. At 1:30, I called again. Voice mail. I followed up with email and was about as crystal clear as one can get in these situations: airline, flight number, seat assignments, dates, aircraft type, and so on. I got busy at work, but kept my cell phone at my side in case she called back. She did not. All she had to do was follow the simple instructions, and she’d be done with me.


    If a pretty poster and a cute saying are all it takes to motivate you, you probably have an easy job. The kind robots will be doing soon.

    This morning, I called again, catching her at the desk. Insert excuse here. She remembered my very specific email and said she’d call back. Half an hour later, she did, but breaking the news that the airfares on that particular selection have gone up $110 per ticket (times four), did I want to take another airline instead? While I’m stunned in disbelief, I check kayak, and sure enough, that’s the case. Since the new ticket had no stops, I opted for this. The total, plus a hotel booking, came to $X + $3. She offered the option for me to book the trip on my credit card and get reimbursed, or she would just charge me the $3. At the time, my thinking was “I don’t want to float the $X,” so I gave her my number to charge the three bucks and consume the $X voucher.

    Later in the afternoon, I happened to be pricing rental cars. (It’s $24 to rent a car to go to the airport. Or, I can park there for $12-$20/day. Or, I can take Shuttle Express at $21 x 4 people. Or I can pay a cab $65….) I had a question about the aircraft type, and pulled up the itinerary online. The ticket price had gone up even further. The hair on the back of my neck was tingling because I hadn’t received a confirmation email from her.

    Since I’m totally anal about these things, I pulled up the flight number and looked at the seat assignments. As I feared, the block of seats she had mentioned are very much available, meaning either she hadn’t booked it or there was some kind of transient subspace anomaly and it didn’t go through. Tomorrow, I will call and open up with “hey, I didn’t get a receipt for the itinerary, would you mind sending it again.” Her response will no doubt rhyme with “poops” as she segues into telling me it’ll cost me more money because she was lazy. I’ll ask for the voucher back in cash. We’ll see what happens next.

    Meanwhile, I found a cupcake deal on resort hotel #1, bargains on three rental car reservations (to airport, from airport, and while I’m there), yet I still need a way to get to my vacation destination. I may try sweating it out another week, hoping the airfares fluctuate again, and booking it myself. I know they make a relatively small amount on the ticket, I don’t think I can make this an easier transaction.

     

    • Share:
    Share →
    Tweet

    Leave a Reply Cancel reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    *

    *

    You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

    • Recent Posts

      • Fun with Amazon.com
      • Ganglioneuroma: Rarest and most benign
      • It’s done
      • Fun with Yelp…
      • That’s no moon…
      • Online classes
      • Insert your getting stoned joke here
      • The new Gmail look and feel…
      • Garmin 60Csx vs Oregon 450
      • Our 2011 Apple Harvest
      • Expense report
      • Hard Drive Destruction
      • It’s the small things…
      • Random passwords
      • Cherry Dutch Baby
    • Recent Comments

      • Fun with Amazon.com
        • Kiri: The TWM Raven-parody is priceless. Thanks for sharing all these weird and funky...
      • It’s done
        • Kiri: I was fascinated to get this gown’s-eye-vie w of the hospital and surgery...
        • jim: Thanks, you all. I am feeling much better. @John – When I knew the surgery...
      • Cleaning between the door glass of a Frigidaire oven
        • Lisa Bishop: Thanks so much! This was a great help in cleaning our oven door after a...
        • Tracey: Thanks for your post on how to clean between the door. I can’t stand...
        • Krys: Thanks for the awesome post. Lo and behold found out my door comes out…...
        • winniekate: OK. I’ve got a Kenmore 790 3 ys ago. Got the same drip in my glass...
        • Kate: I say that to my 30-year-old fiance on a fairly regular basis as well. ;)
      • Ganglioneuroma: Rarest and most benign
        • jim: Thanks, guys. @Phil – I am looking forward to our next hike! @John –...
    • Twits

      • @sbrisko kk000ll!!!!!!1111!!1! I can't decide if I want to call it "The Vault" or "Flagship Frodo." 09:34:31 PM February 07, 2012 in reply to sbrisko ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • Writing a letter to cancel a credit card is so much more efficient than calling and having to deal with the retention department. 01:43:45 AM February 07, 2012 ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • @doomnibbler Sounds promising, but needs a #handie hashtag. 12:44:56 AM February 06, 2012 in reply to doomnibbler ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • RT @mightyrosebud: Just read a list of "100 things to do before you die". I'm surprised "yell for help" wasn't one of them." 01:54:18 AM January 30, 2012 ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • @voxkev Let me know if you find an app. I used a python script (http://t.co/tTN5PlRq). For music, Dupin helps identify dupes. 08:41:07 AM January 28, 2012 in reply to voxkev ReplyRetweetFavorite
      @jim_carson
    @sbrisko kk000ll!!!!!!1111!!1! I can't decide if I want to call it "The Vault" or "Flagship Frodo."  — jim_carson
    loading Cancel
    Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
    Email check failed, please try again
    Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.