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Stikkord: Sainsbury’s

  • Jeg sendte en ny e-post til Sainsbury’s


    Gmail – RE: Re: Re: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office [SR 1-293497288] [SR 1-293687928] [SR 1-293772111]






    Gmail

    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>






    RE: Re: Re: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office [SR 1-293497288] [SR 1-293687928] [SR 1-293772111]






    Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Fri, Aug 16, 2013 at 6:42 PM



    To:
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk

    Cc:
    Executive Response <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>






    Baskets with separators in them? I haven’t suggested that at all.

    What a dumb idea. Also, I mention in my previous e-mail that I like to keep this in writing.

    And you suggest that I speak with the Store Manager.
    That’s just dumb then, I think. Could you please escalate to your line-manager. Erik Ribsskog
    On Fri, Aug 16, 2013 at 4:54 PM, <customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog


    Thank you for your reply.


    We aim to provide the highest level of customer service in our stores, on the phone and online.  This is something we put great emphasis on during colleague training.  


    Our store managers are always happy to discuss any issues our customers have in their stores.  I can see from previous correspondence you have been encouraged to speak directly with our store manager.  This will help to ensure he is able to address the issues you have at the time and help him to understand exactly what can be done to rectify them.


    With regards to the baskets with separators in them, I have logged this suggestion on our system so it can be taken on board by the relevant department in the future.

    We appreciate you taking the time to contact us.


    Yours sincerely

    Debbie Knight | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262
    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys [THREAD ID:1-4UOWZA] —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 15.08.2013 01:28:05 PM
    To: customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk
    Cc: Executive Response <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office [SR 1-293497288] [SR 1-293687928]
    Hi,


    I think it’s better to do this in writing. Because then one get to keep a copy of the correspondence, (in the e-mails), as documentation, of whats being said. Hope this is alright! Best regards,
    Erik Ribsskog


    On Thu, Aug 15, 2013 at 11:12 AM, <customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:


    Dear Mr Ribsskog


    Thank you for getting back in touch with us. I would like to assure you that we are always happy to answer customer enquiries.  To ensure we can provide you with an accurate answer to your questions, I would appreciate it if you could give us a call on 0800 636262.

    We appreciate the time that you have taken to contact us and hope to hear from you soon.


    Yours sincerely


    Chris Martin | Customer Manager


    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262
    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys [THREAD ID:1-4UOWZA] —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 13.08.2013 05:27:25 PM
    To: customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk
    Cc: Executive Response <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office [SR 1-293497288] Hi,
    ok, I don’t understand why you don’t fill up the self-service check out machines with enough coins at the start of the day? Or why don’t you refill one machine at the time? (In stead of closing the whole department?).
    This seems strange to me.

    If you have a self service department, then that should be open, when the store is open, I think.


    I used to shop at the big Sainsbury in Kensington, (the one with a Starbucks cafe), for around a week, in February, in 2005. And they didn’t tell me then that these types of departments weren’t going to be open for all the hours the store is open.
    This seems strange, I think.

    And in the staffed till that day some boys with bikes, (I think it was), forgot a plastic-bottle of milk. When they were in that till before me.


    (Because that was the till with the shortest queue). I thought this was strange. And the female Cashier was  unaware so I had to tell her that someone had forgotten their milk.


    And she ran after the boys. So it’s easier to shop in the self-service tills I think. I’m from Norway and there they use a kind of divider, so that customers have longer time, to pack their goods, in the staffed tills.


    That’s one of the reasons I like the self-service-tills, because then you don’t get the next customers goods mixed with your own goods.


    So I think it’s strange that you sometimes close the self service department early.


    If you have a department like that it should be open as long as the store is open, I think.


    I’ve never seen this at Asda, that they close the self-service-department early. Erik Ribsskog

    PS. I send a copy e-mail to Tesco, since they haven’t replied yet, to my complaint about them. Tesco Walton doesn’t have a self-service department, for some reason. So there it’s a bit stressing to shop, I think.
    And your cashiers, at Sainsburys Rice Lane, they don’t stand in their tills, like the cashiers at Tesco Walton. Since you have chairs, in your tills, I guess the reason is.

    And you at Sainsbury’s only have one type of shopping-baskets. Where as Tesco Walton has three different types, (which doesn’t mix/stock, even if they are more or less the same size). They have some dark blue baskets, some less dark blue baskets, and some metal-baskets, which looks more or less like Sainsbury’s baskets in Rice Lane, I think.
    So I think enough ‘strange stuff’ is going on, at Tesco Walton. So I don’t like it when Sainsbury’s Rice Lane starts to do ‘strange stuff’ as well. Just as an update.

    On Tue, Aug 13, 2013 at 9:15 AM, <customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:


    Dear Mr Ribsskog


    Thank you for your email.  I am sorry that when you visited our Rice Lane store recently our self scanner checkouts closed early and you were wondering why this happens.


    We always aim to exceed our customers’ expectations and we use customers’ feedback to continually improve our products and services.


    I called the store and spoke to Diane Colligan, Checkout Team Leader.  Diane explained that the reason the self scanner checkouts were switched off was to allow them to remove the money cassettes as they were empty and refill them.  Diane apologises for any inconvenience caused.


    I hope this information is helpful.  We appreciate you taking the time to email us and we hope to see you in store again soon.


    Yours sincerely


    Lillian Tarditi | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262
    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys [THREAD ID:1-4UOWZA] —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 09.08.2013 10:23:52 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    Hi,

    today I was at Tesco Walton again, (and also a Sainsbury-shop).

    Budget chicken nuggets were sold out at Tesco Walton today, for the second day in a row.

    When I walked in to the shop, a security guard placed himself between me and the shopping-baskets, with his behind towards me.

    He was completely un-aware of that I wanted a basket.

    (Or he pretended to be unaware).

    Is it right that security-guards in Tesco tidy the shopping-baskets?

    Isn’t that a ‘normal’ Tesco-staff-job?

    I ask that because the security guard seemed to lack basic customer-service skills, like being aware of a customer that walks into the shop, (of whom half of them wants a basket, or something like that).

    It’s hard for me to belive this security-guard.

    Was he acting in-polite and provocing me, I’m wondering.

    Also you have changed packaging on your budget orange juice which you sell from the ‘milk-department’, (that is the type you sell from a fridge).

    Also, I tried to complain to the woman in the check-out that the chicken nuggets were sold out.

    But she didn’t answer me at all.

    Before she waited for a long time, before giving me the receipt.

    (This was at 21.13, it says on the receipt).

    Also, most of your cashiers are standing in their tills.

    As an experienced cashier I wonder why they don’t want to sit on their chairs.

    Is this something cultural, I’m wondering.

    Regards,

    Erik Ribsskog PS. And to Sainsbury’s in Rice Lane. You closed your self-service tills at around 21.15, (I think it was), on Wednesday.


    Why do you close them early, I’m wondering.


    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>

    Date: Wed, Jul 31, 2013 at 2:52 PM
    Subject: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    To: eribsskog@gmail.com

    Dear Mr Ribsskog Thank you for your email. Regrettably, we have nothing further to add however please be assured that your further comments have been noted. Many thanks once again for contacting the Chief Executive’s Office.
    Kind regards David Upstone
    Customer Service Executive Tesco Logo ……………… Original Message ……………… To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Received: 30/07/2013
    Subject: Update/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office Hi, I’ve checked on Wikipedia now. And Storebrand had a profit of NOK 1471 million, in 2010, it says. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storebrand And Tesco had a net income of £124 million, it says. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesco So Tesco had a lower profit, even if Tesco has 537 784 employees. And Storebrand has 2160 employees. That says something about that Tesco aren’t that well run, I think. Could it be the problem with the baskets? Erik Ribsskog
    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>
    Date: Tue, Jul 30, 2013 at 4:39 PM
    Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    Hi, I’ve studied Information Management in Norway, for two years, in the late
    80’s and early 90’s. And as part of a Management/Organisation-module there, I contacted the big
    Norwegian insurance-company UNI Storebrand, and they sent me their
    organisation-map. They are also a big company, so I don’t buy this. I don’t need a very detailed organisation-map. A general one would be ok, then I would at least get the overview on how
    your customer service is organised. Erik Ribsskog On Tue, Jul 30, 2013 at 4:33 PM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk> wrote: > **
    > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    >
    > Thank you for your email. I am sorry that you are unhappy with my
    > response, this certainly was not my intention.
    >
    > I am sorry that you do not wish to meet with Colin, he is certainly best
    > placed to deal with your concerns. As you are aware, the position on our
    > baskets has already been explained to you, and this remains unchanged.
    >
    > As Tesco is such a large company, I cannot provide you with an overall
    > organisation structure. However as explained, this office is the highest
    > point of escalation for customer complaints.
    >
    > Many thanks once again for contacting the Chief Executive’s Office.
    >
    > Kind regards
    >
    > David Upstone
    > Customer Service Executive
    >
    > [image: Tesco Logo]
    >
    > ……………… Original Message ………………
    >
    > To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    > From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    > Received: 29/07/2013
    >
    >
    > Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    >
    > Hi,
    >
    > I’ve asked for an organisation-map.
    >
    > And Tesco are registered at the London Stock Exchange, (I’ve read on
    > Wikipedia), so you should have one, I think.
    >
    > I want to please have your organisation-map before I go on with this.
    >
    > Or if you have a link to a web-site with that map on, that would also be
    > fine.
    >
    > Also, when I complain to you, then I don’t have to deal with the Store
    > Manager.
    >
    > I’ve worked as a Store Manager myself, (in the Rimi-chain, owned by ICA).
    >
    > And the Area Manager, (Anne-Kathrine Skodvin), wouldn’t always tell me who
    > had complained about the shop I ran, (as I remember it).
    >
    > So there’s no need for me to deal with the Store Manager directly as I see
    > it.
    >
    > As I’ve explained I’d prefer if Tesco’s central organisation could be like
    > a buffer between me and the staff in the mentioned shop, (Tesco Walton).
    >
    > Thanks in advance for the help with this!
    >
    > Regards,
    >
    > Erik Ribsskog
    >
    >
    > On Mon, Jul 29, 2013 at 4:01 PM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk> wrote:
    >
    > > **
    > > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    > >
    > > Thank you for your email.
    > >
    > > As advised, Colin Richardson, the Walton Store Manager, would be happy to
    > > meet with you in store to discuss any concerns you may have.  I really do
    > > hope that you will choose to meet with him.
    > >
    > > The Chief Executive’s Office is the highest point of escalation as we
    > > reply on behalf of our board members. Regrettably there is nothing
    > further
    > > I can add on this matter.
    > >
    > > Many thanks once again for contacting the Chief Executive’s Office.
    > >
    > >
    > > Kind regards
    > >
    > > David Upstone
    > > Customer Service Executive
    > >
    > > [image: Tesco Logo]
    > >
    > > ……………… Original Message ………………
    > >
    > > To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    > > From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    > > Received: 29/07/2013
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    > >
    > > Hi,
    > >
    > > and how do you explain that Tesco wants to have many different types of
    > > baskets with the same volume that doesn’t mix/stock?
    > >
    > > Also, it’s not the first time I’ve complained about the Sun Sip-cola
    > being
    > > sold out.
    > >
    > > I think it’s better if your office serves as a buffer, between me and the
    > > Tesco Walton-employees, if that’s alright.
    > >
    > > I would have liked to asked your line-manager if that’s alright.
    > >
    > > And I would have wanted him/her to explain about the ‘basket-case’.
    > >
    > > Thanks in advance for the help with this.
    > >
    > > Erik Ribsskog
    > >
    > >
    > > On Mon, Jul 29, 2013 at 11:59 AM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>
    > wrote:
    > >
    > > > **
    > > > **
    > >
    > > > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    > > >
    > > > Thank you for your patience while this matter has been investigated.
    > > >
    > > > It was disappointing to learn that our Walton store did not have the
    > > items
    > > > you wanted in stock during your visit on the 23rd July, I am sorry for
    > > the
    > > > inconvenience caused.
    > > >
    > > > I have raised with matter with Colin Richardson, the Walton Store
    > > Manager,
    > > > he has asked me to pass on his apologies to you. Colin has advised that
    > > the
    > > > items are now back in stock and that he would be happy to meet with you
    > > in
    > > > store to discuss any concerns you may have. He has also advised that he
    > > > would like to give you a couple of bottles as a way to apologise for
    > this
    > > > matter arising.
    > > >
    > > > I have reviewed the previous correspondence you have had with this
    > office
    > > > and I can confirm that our position is unchanged with regard to our
    > > > baskets. I am sorry that you will be disappointed with my response.
    > > >
    > > > Thank you for taking the time to contact the Chief Executive’s Office.
    > If
    > > > you have any further queries please don’t hesitate to get back in
    > touch.
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > Kind regards
    > > >
    > > > David Upstone
    > > > Customer Service Executive
    > > >
    > > > [image: Tesco Logo]
    > > >
    > > > ……………… Original Message ………………
    > > >
    > > > To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    > > > From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    > > > Received: 26/07/2013
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > Ok,
    > > >
    > > > I’ve sent you a lot of complaints earlier, you see.
    > > >
    > > > And I started sending them to this e-mail address, a couple of years
    > > ago, I
    > > > think.
    > > >
    > > > So now I send all the Tesco-complaints to this e-mail-address.
    > > >
    > > > Tesco Walton and Tesco Superstore Liverpool One also have a problem I
    > > > wanted to complain about, by the way.
    > > >
    > > > And that’s the baskets.
    > > >
    > > > Tesco Walton now have three different types of baskets.
    > > >
    > > > One type which is made of dark blue plastic.
    > > >
    > > > One type which is made of a bit less dark blue plastic.
    > > >
    > > > And a type which is made of metal.
    > > >
    > > > And these three basket-types doesn’t stock with the other basket-types.
    > > >
    > > > So it’s a bit chaotic in the check-out-area, with the baskets.
    > > >
    > > > Since they don’t stock.
    > > >
    > > > If I put a dark blue basket on top of a less dark blue.
    > > >
    > > > Then the dark blue basket doesn’t fit, in the less dark blue.
    > > >
    > > > Even if they are about the same size, in litres, (it looks like to me).
    > > >
    > > > Also the metal ones are about the same size in litres, (like it looks
    > to
    > > > me).
    > > >
    > > > I think it’s odd that a big organisation like Tesco isn’t stream-lined.
    > > >
    > > > I have to focus on the baskets when I shop at Tesco Walton.
    > > >
    > > > It’s like you have to be an expert on Tesco-baskets to shop there, I’d
    > > say.
    > > >
    > > > It’s like you want to bully the custommers from Sainsbury and Asda who
    > > want
    > > > to try Tesco for a change.
    > > >
    > > > Then you aren’t going to get many new customers, perhaps.
    > > >
    > > > If this isn’t something you do to make people use the trolleys then.
    > > >
    > > > Because I’ve worked in a grocery-chain named Rimi, in Norway.
    > > >
    > > > And they were a bit sceptical with having baskets, in the shops.
    > > >
    > > > They only wanted trolleys, (for the customers).
    > > >
    > > > Since customers with trolleys usually buy more, than if they use a
    > > basket,
    > > > to put their groceries in.
    > > >
    > > > But three types of baskets.
    > > >
    > > > Which doesn’t stock.
    > > >
    > > > I think this is how a shop in the third world would have done it.
    > > >
    > > > Why aren’t you more stream-lined, (and ‘Western’), I’m wondering.
    > > >
    > > > And it’s almost the same at Tesco Liverpool One.
    > > >
    > > > Except that I haven’t seen the metal-baskets there.
    > > >
    > > > But they have two types of blue baskets, (with the same volume), that
    > > > doesn’t mix, when one stock them.
    > > >
    > > > And that’s odd for a new shop like that.
    > > >
    > > > Liverpool One has only been around for two or three years.
    > > >
    > > > And this is also a Super-store.
    > > >
    > > > So then it looks like to me that Tesco has problems when they want to
    > > have
    > > > a ‘chaos-system’, like this, with the shopping-baskets.
    > > >
    > > > (I’ve studied Information Management and have gone to commerce-school
    > and
    > > > have worked as a retail-manager.
    > > >
    > > > We learned at commerce-school that ‘the custommer is always right’.
    > > >
    > > > But I don’t think Tesco agrees with this, when I see many different
    > types
    > > > of baskets, that doesn’t stock, in your shops.
    > > >
    > > > Then I wonder if the whole Tesco-chain has lost a bit control, to be
    > > > honest.
    > > >
    > > > Erik Ribsskog
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > On Fri, Jul 26, 2013 at 4:36 PM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>
    > > wrote:
    > > >
    > > > > **
    > > >
    > > > > Our Ref 15143479
    > > > >
    > > > > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    > > > >
    > > > > Thank you for your email addressed to our Chief Executive, to which I
    > > > have
    > > > > been asked to respond. Please accept my apologies for the delay in
    > > doing
    > > > > so.
    > > > >
    > > > > I


    This is a confidential email. Tesco may monitor and record all emails. The views expressed in this email are those of the sender and not Tesco. Tesco Stores Limited
    Company Number: 519500

    Registered in England
    Registered Office: Tesco House, Delamare Road, Cheshunt, Hertfordshire EN8 9SL
    VAT Registration Number: GB 220 4302 31 **********************************************************************
    This footnote confirms that this email message has been swept by

    Sainsbury’s Systems for the presence of computer viruses. Don’t print this email unless you really need to; think of the environment and save a tree!
    **********************************************************************
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    Visit www.sainsburys.co.uk for food and drink inspiration, financial services, TVs, laptops, home and garden and much more, or to buy groceries online. You can live well for less than you thought at Sainsbury’s based on price perception data.


    Don’t print this email unless you really need to; think of the environment and save a tree!


    This email and any files transmitted with it are confidential and intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they are addressed.
    If you have received this email in error please notify the system manager (postmaster@sainsburys.co.uk).


    This footnote also confirms that this email message has been swept for the presence of computer viruses, but does not warrant that the message is virus free.


    Email sent to Sainsbury’s systems may be monitored by the company.


    J Sainsbury plc (185647 England)
    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd (3261722 England)


    Registered Offices:
    33 Holborn
    London EC1N 2HT
    **********************************************************************


  • Jeg sendte en ny e-post til Sainsbury’s


    Gmail – New complaint/Fwd: Re: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office [SR 1-293497288] [SR 1-293687928]






    Gmail

    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>






    New complaint/Fwd: Re: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office [SR 1-293497288] [SR 1-293687928]






    Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Thu, Aug 15, 2013 at 5:18 PM



    To:
    customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk

    Cc:
    Executive Response <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>






    Hi,
    today I was in your Rice Lane-store at 15.35, (it says on the receipt). It seemed like you had closed one of your front-doors, since it was a RAC-campaign outside your store.
    With to men from RAC obstructing people who wanted to go in to the store, by walking in front of them, when they were walking in to the store, through the only remaining open (sliding) door. I couldn’t help noticing that the RAC-man wore a type of pants that ‘highlighted’ his genitals when he passed in front of me, when I was going in to the store. When I walked out of the store the same guy asked me something about which car-insurance-company I used, (or something like that).

    I’ve studied marketing at university-level and like to orientate myself, in the different markets, so I think that ‘intrusive’ sales-people are a bit annoying.

    I think this is harassment, because I’m not interested in being approached by sales-people outside a grocery-store or in a public street. I’ve also worked in telemarketing, (Norsk Idrettshjelp, as an extra-job, for some months in 1995), and I remember how much people lied there to sell the sacks of toilet-paper that we sold on behalf of sport-clubs. So I don’t like to be approached by sales-people, really. It’s perhaps ok, if I go in to some kind of clothes-shop, etc. But I hadn’t gone to an insurance-company. So why did someone ask me about insurance? I think this was annoying. So this I wanted to complain about. I attach a photograph I took of these guys, so that you can understand what I mean. Regards, Erik Ribsskog

    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>
    Date: Thu, Aug 15, 2013 at 1:28 PM
    Subject: Re: Re: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office [SR 1-293497288] [SR 1-293687928]
    To: customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk
    Cc: Executive Response <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>
    Hi,

    I think it’s better to do this in writing. Because then one get to keep a copy of the correspondence, (in the e-mails), as documentation, of whats being said. Hope this is alright!
    Best regards, Erik Ribsskog
    On Thu, Aug 15, 2013 at 11:12 AM, <customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog


    Thank you for getting back in touch with us. I would like to assure you that we are always happy to answer customer enquiries.  To ensure we can provide you with an accurate answer to your questions, I would appreciate it if you could give us a call on 0800 636262.

    We appreciate the time that you have taken to contact us and hope to hear from you soon.


    Yours sincerely


    Chris Martin | Customer Manager


    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262
    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys [THREAD ID:1-4UOWZA] —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 13.08.2013 05:27:25 PM
    To: customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk
    Cc: Executive Response <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office [SR 1-293497288] Hi,
    ok, I don’t understand why you don’t fill up the self-service check out machines with enough coins at the start of the day? Or why don’t you refill one machine at the time? (In stead of closing the whole department?).
    This seems strange to me.

    If you have a self service department, then that should be open, when the store is open, I think.


    I used to shop at the big Sainsbury in Kensington, (the one with a Starbucks cafe), for around a week, in February, in 2005. And they didn’t tell me then that these types of departments weren’t going to be open for all the hours the store is open.
    This seems strange, I think.

    And in the staffed till that day some boys with bikes, (I think it was), forgot a plastic-bottle of milk. When they were in that till before me.


    (Because that was the till with the shortest queue). I thought this was strange. And the female Cashier was  unaware so I had to tell her that someone had forgotten their milk.


    And she ran after the boys. So it’s easier to shop in the self-service tills I think. I’m from Norway and there they use a kind of divider, so that customers have longer time, to pack their goods, in the staffed tills.


    That’s one of the reasons I like the self-service-tills, because then you don’t get the next customers goods mixed with your own goods.


    So I think it’s strange that you sometimes close the self service department early.


    If you have a department like that it should be open as long as the store is open, I think.


    I’ve never seen this at Asda, that they close the self-service-department early. Erik Ribsskog

    PS. I send a copy e-mail to Tesco, since they haven’t replied yet, to my complaint about them. Tesco Walton doesn’t have a self-service department, for some reason. So there it’s a bit stressing to shop, I think.
    And your cashiers, at Sainsburys Rice Lane, they don’t stand in their tills, like the cashiers at Tesco Walton. Since you have chairs, in your tills, I guess the reason is.

    And you at Sainsbury’s only have one type of shopping-baskets. Where as Tesco Walton has three different types, (which doesn’t mix/stock, even if they are more or less the same size). They have some dark blue baskets, some less dark blue baskets, and some metal-baskets, which looks more or less like Sainsbury’s baskets in Rice Lane, I think.
    So I think enough ‘strange stuff’ is going on, at Tesco Walton. So I don’t like it when Sainsbury’s Rice Lane starts to do ‘strange stuff’ as well. Just as an update.

    On Tue, Aug 13, 2013 at 9:15 AM, <customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:


    Dear Mr Ribsskog


    Thank you for your email.  I am sorry that when you visited our Rice Lane store recently our self scanner checkouts closed early and you were wondering why this happens.


    We always aim to exceed our customers’ expectations and we use customers’ feedback to continually improve our products and services.


    I called the store and spoke to Diane Colligan, Checkout Team Leader.  Diane explained that the reason the self scanner checkouts were switched off was to allow them to remove the money cassettes as they were empty and refill them.  Diane apologises for any inconvenience caused.


    I hope this information is helpful.  We appreciate you taking the time to email us and we hope to see you in store again soon.


    Yours sincerely


    Lillian Tarditi | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262
    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys [THREAD ID:1-4UOWZA] —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 09.08.2013 10:23:52 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    Hi,

    today I was at Tesco Walton again, (and also a Sainsbury-shop).

    Budget chicken nuggets were sold out at Tesco Walton today, for the second day in a row.

    When I walked in to the shop, a security guard placed himself between me and the shopping-baskets, with his behind towards me.

    He was completely un-aware of that I wanted a basket.

    (Or he pretended to be unaware).

    Is it right that security-guards in Tesco tidy the shopping-baskets?

    Isn’t that a ‘normal’ Tesco-staff-job?

    I ask that because the security guard seemed to lack basic customer-service skills, like being aware of a customer that walks into the shop, (of whom half of them wants a basket, or something like that).

    It’s hard for me to belive this security-guard.

    Was he acting in-polite and provocing me, I’m wondering.

    Also you have changed packaging on your budget orange juice which you sell from the ‘milk-department’, (that is the type you sell from a fridge).

    Also, I tried to complain to the woman in the check-out that the chicken nuggets were sold out.

    But she didn’t answer me at all.

    Before she waited for a long time, before giving me the receipt.

    (This was at 21.13, it says on the receipt).

    Also, most of your cashiers are standing in their tills.

    As an experienced cashier I wonder why they don’t want to sit on their chairs.

    Is this something cultural, I’m wondering.

    Regards,

    Erik Ribsskog PS. And to Sainsbury’s in Rice Lane. You closed your self-service tills at around 21.15, (I think it was), on Wednesday.


    Why do you close them early, I’m wondering.


    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>

    Date: Wed, Jul 31, 2013 at 2:52 PM
    Subject: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    To: eribsskog@gmail.com

    Dear Mr Ribsskog Thank you for your email. Regrettably, we have nothing further to add however please be assured that your further comments have been noted. Many thanks once again for contacting the Chief Executive’s Office.
    Kind regards David Upstone
    Customer Service Executive Tesco Logo ……………… Original Message ……………… To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Received: 30/07/2013
    Subject: Update/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office Hi, I’ve checked on Wikipedia now. And Storebrand had a profit of NOK 1471 million, in 2010, it says. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storebrand And Tesco had a net income of £124 million, it says. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesco So Tesco had a lower profit, even if Tesco has 537 784 employees. And Storebrand has 2160 employees. That says something about that Tesco aren’t that well run, I think. Could it be the problem with the baskets? Erik Ribsskog
    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>
    Date: Tue, Jul 30, 2013 at 4:39 PM
    Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    Hi, I’ve studied Information Management in Norway, for two years, in the late
    80’s and early 90’s. And as part of a Management/Organisation-module there, I contacted the big
    Norwegian insurance-company UNI Storebrand, and they sent me their
    organisation-map. They are also a big company, so I don’t buy this. I don’t need a very detailed organisation-map. A general one would be ok, then I would at least get the overview on how
    your customer service is organised. Erik Ribsskog On Tue, Jul 30, 2013 at 4:33 PM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk> wrote: > **
    > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    >
    > Thank you for your email. I am sorry that you are unhappy with my
    > response, this certainly was not my intention.
    >
    > I am sorry that you do not wish to meet with Colin, he is certainly best
    > placed to deal with your concerns. As you are aware, the position on our
    > baskets has already been explained to you, and this remains unchanged.
    >
    > As Tesco is such a large company, I cannot provide you with an overall
    > organisation structure. However as explained, this office is the highest
    > point of escalation for customer complaints.
    >
    > Many thanks once again for contacting the Chief Executive’s Office.
    >
    > Kind regards
    >
    > David Upstone
    > Customer Service Executive
    >
    > [image: Tesco Logo]
    >
    > ……………… Original Message ………………
    >
    > To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    > From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    > Received: 29/07/2013
    >
    >
    > Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    >
    > Hi,
    >
    > I’ve asked for an organisation-map.
    >
    > And Tesco are registered at the London Stock Exchange, (I’ve read on
    > Wikipedia), so you should have one, I think.
    >
    > I want to please have your organisation-map before I go on with this.
    >
    > Or if you have a link to a web-site with that map on, that would also be
    > fine.
    >
    > Also, when I complain to you, then I don’t have to deal with the Store
    > Manager.
    >
    > I’ve worked as a Store Manager myself, (in the Rimi-chain, owned by ICA).
    >
    > And the Area Manager, (Anne-Kathrine Skodvin), wouldn’t always tell me who
    > had complained about the shop I ran, (as I remember it).
    >
    > So there’s no need for me to deal with the Store Manager directly as I see
    > it.
    >
    > As I’ve explained I’d prefer if Tesco’s central organisation could be like
    > a buffer between me and the staff in the mentioned shop, (Tesco Walton).
    >
    > Thanks in advance for the help with this!
    >
    > Regards,
    >
    > Erik Ribsskog
    >
    >
    > On Mon, Jul 29, 2013 at 4:01 PM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk> wrote:
    >
    > > **
    > > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    > >
    > > Thank you for your email.
    > >
    > > As advised, Colin Richardson, the Walton Store Manager, would be happy to
    > > meet with you in store to discuss any concerns you may have.  I really do
    > > hope that you will choose to meet with him.
    > >
    > > The Chief Executive’s Office is the highest point of escalation as we
    > > reply on behalf of our board members. Regrettably there is nothing
    > further
    > > I can add on this matter.
    > >
    > > Many thanks once again for contacting the Chief Executive’s Office.
    > >
    > >
    > > Kind regards
    > >
    > > David Upstone
    > > Customer Service Executive
    > >
    > > [image: Tesco Logo]
    > >
    > > ……………… Original Message ………………
    > >
    > > To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    > > From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    > > Received: 29/07/2013
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    > >
    > > Hi,
    > >
    > > and how do you explain that Tesco wants to have many different types of
    > > baskets with the same volume that doesn’t mix/stock?
    > >
    > > Also, it’s not the first time I’ve complained about the Sun Sip-cola
    > being
    > > sold out.
    > >
    > > I think it’s better if your office serves as a buffer, between me and the
    > > Tesco Walton-employees, if that’s alright.
    > >
    > > I would have liked to asked your line-manager if that’s alright.
    > >
    > > And I would have wanted him/her to explain about the ‘basket-case’.
    > >
    > > Thanks in advance for the help with this.
    > >
    > > Erik Ribsskog
    > >
    > >
    > > On Mon, Jul 29, 2013 at 11:59 AM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>
    > wrote:
    > >
    > > > **
    > > > **
    > >
    > > > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    > > >
    > > > Thank you for your patience while this matter has been investigated.
    > > >
    > > > It was disappointing to learn that our Walton store did not have the
    > > items
    > > > you wanted in stock during your visit on the 23rd July, I am sorry for
    > > the
    > > > inconvenience caused.
    > > >
    > > > I have raised with matter with Colin Richardson, the Walton Store
    > > Manager,
    > > > he has asked me to pass on his apologies to you. Colin has advised that
    > > the
    > > > items are now back in stock and that he would be happy to meet with you
    > > in
    > > > store to discuss any concerns you may have. He has also advised that he
    > > > would like to give you a couple of bottles as a way to apologise for
    > this
    > > > matter arising.
    > > >
    > > > I have reviewed the previous correspondence you have had with this
    > office
    > > > and I can confirm that our position is unchanged with regard to our
    > > > baskets. I am sorry that you will be disappointed with my response.
    > > >
    > > > Thank you for taking the time to contact the Chief Executive’s Office.
    > If
    > > > you have any further queries please don’t hesitate to get back in
    > touch.
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > Kind regards
    > > >
    > > > David Upstone
    > > > Customer Service Executive
    > > >
    > > > [image: Tesco Logo]
    > > >
    > > > ……………… Original Message ………………
    > > >
    > > > To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    > > > From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    > > > Received: 26/07/2013
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > Ok,
    > > >
    > > > I’ve sent you a lot of complaints earlier, you see.
    > > >
    > > > And I started sending them to this e-mail address, a couple of years
    > > ago, I
    > > > think.
    > > >
    > > > So now I send all the Tesco-complaints to this e-mail-address.
    > > >
    > > > Tesco Walton and Tesco Superstore Liverpool One also have a problem I
    > > > wanted to complain about, by the way.
    > > >
    > > > And that’s the baskets.
    > > >
    > > > Tesco Walton now have three different types of baskets.
    > > >
    > > > One type which is made of dark blue plastic.
    > > >
    > > > One type which is made of a bit less dark blue plastic.
    > > >
    > > > And a type which is made of metal.
    > > >
    > > > And these three basket-types doesn’t stock with the other basket-types.
    > > >
    > > > So it’s a bit chaotic in the check-out-area, with the baskets.
    > > >
    > > > Since they don’t stock.
    > > >
    > > > If I put a dark blue basket on top of a less dark blue.
    > > >
    > > > Then the dark blue basket doesn’t fit, in the less dark blue.
    > > >
    > > > Even if they are about the same size, in litres, (it looks like to me).
    > > >
    > > > Also the metal ones are about the same size in litres, (like it looks
    > to
    > > > me).
    > > >
    > > > I think it’s odd that a big organisation like Tesco isn’t stream-lined.
    > > >
    > > > I have to focus on the baskets when I shop at Tesco Walton.
    > > >
    > > > It’s like you have to be an expert on Tesco-baskets to shop there, I’d
    > > say.
    > > >
    > > > It’s like you want to bully the custommers from Sainsbury and Asda who
    > > want
    > > > to try Tesco for a change.
    > > >
    > > > Then you aren’t going to get many new customers, perhaps.
    > > >
    > > > If this isn’t something you do to make people use the trolleys then.
    > > >
    > > > Because I’ve worked in a grocery-chain named Rimi, in Norway.
    > > >
    > > > And they were a bit sceptical with having baskets, in the shops.
    > > >
    > > > They only wanted trolleys, (for the customers).
    > > >
    > > > Since customers with trolleys usually buy more, than if they use a
    > > basket,
    > > > to put their groceries in.
    > > >
    > > > But three types of baskets.
    > > >
    > > > Which doesn’t stock.
    > > >
    > > > I think this is how a shop in the third world would have done it.
    > > >
    > > > Why aren’t you more stream-lined, (and ‘Western’), I’m wondering.
    > > >
    > > > And it’s almost the same at Tesco Liverpool One.
    > > >
    > > > Except that I haven’t seen the metal-baskets there.
    > > >
    > > > But they have two types of blue baskets, (with the same volume), that
    > > > doesn’t mix, when one stock them.
    > > >
    > > > And that’s odd for a new shop like that.
    > > >
    > > > Liverpool One has only been around for two or three years.
    > > >
    > > > And this is also a Super-store.
    > > >
    > > > So then it looks like to me that Tesco has problems when they want to
    > > have
    > > > a ‘chaos-system’, like this, with the shopping-baskets.
    > > >
    > > > (I’ve studied Information Management and have gone to commerce-school
    > and
    > > > have worked as a retail-manager.
    > > >
    > > > We learned at commerce-school that ‘the custommer is always right’.
    > > >
    > > > But I don’t think Tesco agrees with this, when I see many different
    > types
    > > > of baskets, that doesn’t stock, in your shops.
    > > >
    > > > Then I wonder if the whole Tesco-chain has lost a bit control, to be
    > > > honest.
    > > >
    > > > Erik Ribsskog
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > On Fri, Jul 26, 2013 at 4:36 PM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>
    > > wrote:
    > > >
    > > > > **
    > > >
    > > > > Our Ref 15143479
    > > > >
    > > > > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    > > > >
    > > > > Thank you for your email addressed to our Chief Executive, to which I
    > > > have
    > > > > been asked to respond. Please accept my apologies for the delay in
    > > doing
    > > > > so.
    > > > >
    > > > > I


    This is a confidential email. Tesco may monitor and record all emails. The views expressed in this email are those of the sender and not Tesco. Tesco Stores Limited
    Company Number: 519500

    Registered in England
    Registered Office: Tesco House, Delamare Road, Cheshunt, Hertfordshire EN8 9SL
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    This footnote confirms that this email message has been swept by

    Sainsbury’s Systems for the presence of computer viruses. Don’t print this email unless you really need to; think of the environment and save a tree!
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    Visit www.sainsburys.co.uk for food and drink inspiration, financial services, TVs, laptops, home and garden and much more, or to buy groceries online. You can live well for less than you thought at Sainsbury’s based on price perception data.


    Don’t print this email unless you really need to; think of the environment and save a tree!


    This email and any files transmitted with it are confidential and intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they are addressed.
    If you have received this email in error please notify the system manager (postmaster@sainsburys.co.uk).


    This footnote also confirms that this email message has been swept for the presence of computer viruses, but does not warrant that the message is virus free.


    Email sent to Sainsbury’s systems may be monitored by the company.


    J Sainsbury plc (185647 England)
    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd (3261722 England)


    Registered Offices:
    33 Holborn
    London EC1N 2HT
    **********************************************************************




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    PS. Her er vedlegget: PIC_1879

  • Jeg sendte en ny e-post til Sainsbury’s


    Gmail – RE: Re: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office [SR 1-293497288] [SR 1-293687928]






    Gmail

    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>






    RE: Re: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office [SR 1-293497288] [SR 1-293687928]






    Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Thu, Aug 15, 2013 at 1:28 PM



    To:
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk

    Cc:
    Executive Response <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>






    Hi,

    I think it’s better to do this in writing. Because then one get to keep a copy of the correspondence, (in the e-mails), as documentation, of whats being said. Hope this is alright!
    Best regards, Erik Ribsskog
    On Thu, Aug 15, 2013 at 11:12 AM, <customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog


    Thank you for getting back in touch with us. I would like to assure you that we are always happy to answer customer enquiries.  To ensure we can provide you with an accurate answer to your questions, I would appreciate it if you could give us a call on 0800 636262.

    We appreciate the time that you have taken to contact us and hope to hear from you soon.


    Yours sincerely


    Chris Martin | Customer Manager


    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262
    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys [THREAD ID:1-4UOWZA] —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 13.08.2013 05:27:25 PM
    To: customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk
    Cc: Executive Response <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office [SR 1-293497288] Hi,
    ok, I don’t understand why you don’t fill up the self-service check out machines with enough coins at the start of the day? Or why don’t you refill one machine at the time? (In stead of closing the whole department?).
    This seems strange to me.

    If you have a self service department, then that should be open, when the store is open, I think.


    I used to shop at the big Sainsbury in Kensington, (the one with a Starbucks cafe), for around a week, in February, in 2005. And they didn’t tell me then that these types of departments weren’t going to be open for all the hours the store is open.
    This seems strange, I think.

    And in the staffed till that day some boys with bikes, (I think it was), forgot a plastic-bottle of milk. When they were in that till before me.


    (Because that was the till with the shortest queue). I thought this was strange. And the female Cashier was  unaware so I had to tell her that someone had forgotten their milk.


    And she ran after the boys. So it’s easier to shop in the self-service tills I think. I’m from Norway and there they use a kind of divider, so that customers have longer time, to pack their goods, in the staffed tills.


    That’s one of the reasons I like the self-service-tills, because then you don’t get the next customers goods mixed with your own goods.


    So I think it’s strange that you sometimes close the self service department early.


    If you have a department like that it should be open as long as the store is open, I think.


    I’ve never seen this at Asda, that they close the self-service-department early. Erik Ribsskog

    PS. I send a copy e-mail to Tesco, since they haven’t replied yet, to my complaint about them. Tesco Walton doesn’t have a self-service department, for some reason. So there it’s a bit stressing to shop, I think.
    And your cashiers, at Sainsburys Rice Lane, they don’t stand in their tills, like the cashiers at Tesco Walton. Since you have chairs, in your tills, I guess the reason is.

    And you at Sainsbury’s only have one type of shopping-baskets. Where as Tesco Walton has three different types, (which doesn’t mix/stock, even if they are more or less the same size). They have some dark blue baskets, some less dark blue baskets, and some metal-baskets, which looks more or less like Sainsbury’s baskets in Rice Lane, I think.
    So I think enough ‘strange stuff’ is going on, at Tesco Walton. So I don’t like it when Sainsbury’s Rice Lane starts to do ‘strange stuff’ as well. Just as an update.

    On Tue, Aug 13, 2013 at 9:15 AM, <customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:


    Dear Mr Ribsskog


    Thank you for your email.  I am sorry that when you visited our Rice Lane store recently our self scanner checkouts closed early and you were wondering why this happens.


    We always aim to exceed our customers’ expectations and we use customers’ feedback to continually improve our products and services.


    I called the store and spoke to Diane Colligan, Checkout Team Leader.  Diane explained that the reason the self scanner checkouts were switched off was to allow them to remove the money cassettes as they were empty and refill them.  Diane apologises for any inconvenience caused.


    I hope this information is helpful.  We appreciate you taking the time to email us and we hope to see you in store again soon.


    Yours sincerely


    Lillian Tarditi | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262
    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys [THREAD ID:1-4UOWZA] —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 09.08.2013 10:23:52 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    Hi,

    today I was at Tesco Walton again, (and also a Sainsbury-shop).

    Budget chicken nuggets were sold out at Tesco Walton today, for the second day in a row.

    When I walked in to the shop, a security guard placed himself between me and the shopping-baskets, with his behind towards me.

    He was completely un-aware of that I wanted a basket.

    (Or he pretended to be unaware).

    Is it right that security-guards in Tesco tidy the shopping-baskets?

    Isn’t that a ‘normal’ Tesco-staff-job?

    I ask that because the security guard seemed to lack basic customer-service skills, like being aware of a customer that walks into the shop, (of whom half of them wants a basket, or something like that).

    It’s hard for me to belive this security-guard.

    Was he acting in-polite and provocing me, I’m wondering.

    Also you have changed packaging on your budget orange juice which you sell from the ‘milk-department’, (that is the type you sell from a fridge).

    Also, I tried to complain to the woman in the check-out that the chicken nuggets were sold out.

    But she didn’t answer me at all.

    Before she waited for a long time, before giving me the receipt.

    (This was at 21.13, it says on the receipt).

    Also, most of your cashiers are standing in their tills.

    As an experienced cashier I wonder why they don’t want to sit on their chairs.

    Is this something cultural, I’m wondering.

    Regards,

    Erik Ribsskog PS. And to Sainsbury’s in Rice Lane. You closed your self-service tills at around 21.15, (I think it was), on Wednesday.


    Why do you close them early, I’m wondering.


    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>

    Date: Wed, Jul 31, 2013 at 2:52 PM
    Subject: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    To: eribsskog@gmail.com

    Dear Mr Ribsskog Thank you for your email. Regrettably, we have nothing further to add however please be assured that your further comments have been noted. Many thanks once again for contacting the Chief Executive’s Office.
    Kind regards David Upstone
    Customer Service Executive Tesco Logo ……………… Original Message ……………… To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Received: 30/07/2013
    Subject: Update/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office Hi, I’ve checked on Wikipedia now. And Storebrand had a profit of NOK 1471 million, in 2010, it says. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storebrand And Tesco had a net income of £124 million, it says. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesco So Tesco had a lower profit, even if Tesco has 537 784 employees. And Storebrand has 2160 employees. That says something about that Tesco aren’t that well run, I think. Could it be the problem with the baskets? Erik Ribsskog
    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>
    Date: Tue, Jul 30, 2013 at 4:39 PM
    Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    Hi, I’ve studied Information Management in Norway, for two years, in the late
    80’s and early 90’s. And as part of a Management/Organisation-module there, I contacted the big
    Norwegian insurance-company UNI Storebrand, and they sent me their
    organisation-map. They are also a big company, so I don’t buy this. I don’t need a very detailed organisation-map. A general one would be ok, then I would at least get the overview on how
    your customer service is organised. Erik Ribsskog On Tue, Jul 30, 2013 at 4:33 PM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk> wrote: > **
    > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    >
    > Thank you for your email. I am sorry that you are unhappy with my
    > response, this certainly was not my intention.
    >
    > I am sorry that you do not wish to meet with Colin, he is certainly best
    > placed to deal with your concerns. As you are aware, the position on our
    > baskets has already been explained to you, and this remains unchanged.
    >
    > As Tesco is such a large company, I cannot provide you with an overall
    > organisation structure. However as explained, this office is the highest
    > point of escalation for customer complaints.
    >
    > Many thanks once again for contacting the Chief Executive’s Office.
    >
    > Kind regards
    >
    > David Upstone
    > Customer Service Executive
    >
    > [image: Tesco Logo]
    >
    > ……………… Original Message ………………
    >
    > To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    > From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    > Received: 29/07/2013
    >
    >
    > Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    >
    > Hi,
    >
    > I’ve asked for an organisation-map.
    >
    > And Tesco are registered at the London Stock Exchange, (I’ve read on
    > Wikipedia), so you should have one, I think.
    >
    > I want to please have your organisation-map before I go on with this.
    >
    > Or if you have a link to a web-site with that map on, that would also be
    > fine.
    >
    > Also, when I complain to you, then I don’t have to deal with the Store
    > Manager.
    >
    > I’ve worked as a Store Manager myself, (in the Rimi-chain, owned by ICA).
    >
    > And the Area Manager, (Anne-Kathrine Skodvin), wouldn’t always tell me who
    > had complained about the shop I ran, (as I remember it).
    >
    > So there’s no need for me to deal with the Store Manager directly as I see
    > it.
    >
    > As I’ve explained I’d prefer if Tesco’s central organisation could be like
    > a buffer between me and the staff in the mentioned shop, (Tesco Walton).
    >
    > Thanks in advance for the help with this!
    >
    > Regards,
    >
    > Erik Ribsskog
    >
    >
    > On Mon, Jul 29, 2013 at 4:01 PM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk> wrote:
    >
    > > **
    > > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    > >
    > > Thank you for your email.
    > >
    > > As advised, Colin Richardson, the Walton Store Manager, would be happy to
    > > meet with you in store to discuss any concerns you may have.  I really do
    > > hope that you will choose to meet with him.
    > >
    > > The Chief Executive’s Office is the highest point of escalation as we
    > > reply on behalf of our board members. Regrettably there is nothing
    > further
    > > I can add on this matter.
    > >
    > > Many thanks once again for contacting the Chief Executive’s Office.
    > >
    > >
    > > Kind regards
    > >
    > > David Upstone
    > > Customer Service Executive
    > >
    > > [image: Tesco Logo]
    > >
    > > ……………… Original Message ………………
    > >
    > > To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    > > From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    > > Received: 29/07/2013
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    > >
    > > Hi,
    > >
    > > and how do you explain that Tesco wants to have many different types of
    > > baskets with the same volume that doesn’t mix/stock?
    > >
    > > Also, it’s not the first time I’ve complained about the Sun Sip-cola
    > being
    > > sold out.
    > >
    > > I think it’s better if your office serves as a buffer, between me and the
    > > Tesco Walton-employees, if that’s alright.
    > >
    > > I would have liked to asked your line-manager if that’s alright.
    > >
    > > And I would have wanted him/her to explain about the ‘basket-case’.
    > >
    > > Thanks in advance for the help with this.
    > >
    > > Erik Ribsskog
    > >
    > >
    > > On Mon, Jul 29, 2013 at 11:59 AM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>
    > wrote:
    > >
    > > > **
    > > > **
    > >
    > > > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    > > >
    > > > Thank you for your patience while this matter has been investigated.
    > > >
    > > > It was disappointing to learn that our Walton store did not have the
    > > items
    > > > you wanted in stock during your visit on the 23rd July, I am sorry for
    > > the
    > > > inconvenience caused.
    > > >
    > > > I have raised with matter with Colin Richardson, the Walton Store
    > > Manager,
    > > > he has asked me to pass on his apologies to you. Colin has advised that
    > > the
    > > > items are now back in stock and that he would be happy to meet with you
    > > in
    > > > store to discuss any concerns you may have. He has also advised that he
    > > > would like to give you a couple of bottles as a way to apologise for
    > this
    > > > matter arising.
    > > >
    > > > I have reviewed the previous correspondence you have had with this
    > office
    > > > and I can confirm that our position is unchanged with regard to our
    > > > baskets. I am sorry that you will be disappointed with my response.
    > > >
    > > > Thank you for taking the time to contact the Chief Executive’s Office.
    > If
    > > > you have any further queries please don’t hesitate to get back in
    > touch.
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > Kind regards
    > > >
    > > > David Upstone
    > > > Customer Service Executive
    > > >
    > > > [image: Tesco Logo]
    > > >
    > > > ……………… Original Message ………………
    > > >
    > > > To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    > > > From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    > > > Received: 26/07/2013
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > Ok,
    > > >
    > > > I’ve sent you a lot of complaints earlier, you see.
    > > >
    > > > And I started sending them to this e-mail address, a couple of years
    > > ago, I
    > > > think.
    > > >
    > > > So now I send all the Tesco-complaints to this e-mail-address.
    > > >
    > > > Tesco Walton and Tesco Superstore Liverpool One also have a problem I
    > > > wanted to complain about, by the way.
    > > >
    > > > And that’s the baskets.
    > > >
    > > > Tesco Walton now have three different types of baskets.
    > > >
    > > > One type which is made of dark blue plastic.
    > > >
    > > > One type which is made of a bit less dark blue plastic.
    > > >
    > > > And a type which is made of metal.
    > > >
    > > > And these three basket-types doesn’t stock with the other basket-types.
    > > >
    > > > So it’s a bit chaotic in the check-out-area, with the baskets.
    > > >
    > > > Since they don’t stock.
    > > >
    > > > If I put a dark blue basket on top of a less dark blue.
    > > >
    > > > Then the dark blue basket doesn’t fit, in the less dark blue.
    > > >
    > > > Even if they are about the same size, in litres, (it looks like to me).
    > > >
    > > > Also the metal ones are about the same size in litres, (like it looks
    > to
    > > > me).
    > > >
    > > > I think it’s odd that a big organisation like Tesco isn’t stream-lined.
    > > >
    > > > I have to focus on the baskets when I shop at Tesco Walton.
    > > >
    > > > It’s like you have to be an expert on Tesco-baskets to shop there, I’d
    > > say.
    > > >
    > > > It’s like you want to bully the custommers from Sainsbury and Asda who
    > > want
    > > > to try Tesco for a change.
    > > >
    > > > Then you aren’t going to get many new customers, perhaps.
    > > >
    > > > If this isn’t something you do to make people use the trolleys then.
    > > >
    > > > Because I’ve worked in a grocery-chain named Rimi, in Norway.
    > > >
    > > > And they were a bit sceptical with having baskets, in the shops.
    > > >
    > > > They only wanted trolleys, (for the customers).
    > > >
    > > > Since customers with trolleys usually buy more, than if they use a
    > > basket,
    > > > to put their groceries in.
    > > >
    > > > But three types of baskets.
    > > >
    > > > Which doesn’t stock.
    > > >
    > > > I think this is how a shop in the third world would have done it.
    > > >
    > > > Why aren’t you more stream-lined, (and ‘Western’), I’m wondering.
    > > >
    > > > And it’s almost the same at Tesco Liverpool One.
    > > >
    > > > Except that I haven’t seen the metal-baskets there.
    > > >
    > > > But they have two types of blue baskets, (with the same volume), that
    > > > doesn’t mix, when one stock them.
    > > >
    > > > And that’s odd for a new shop like that.
    > > >
    > > > Liverpool One has only been around for two or three years.
    > > >
    > > > And this is also a Super-store.
    > > >
    > > > So then it looks like to me that Tesco has problems when they want to
    > > have
    > > > a ‘chaos-system’, like this, with the shopping-baskets.
    > > >
    > > > (I’ve studied Information Management and have gone to commerce-school
    > and
    > > > have worked as a retail-manager.
    > > >
    > > > We learned at commerce-school that ‘the custommer is always right’.
    > > >
    > > > But I don’t think Tesco agrees with this, when I see many different
    > types
    > > > of baskets, that doesn’t stock, in your shops.
    > > >
    > > > Then I wonder if the whole Tesco-chain has lost a bit control, to be
    > > > honest.
    > > >
    > > > Erik Ribsskog
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > On Fri, Jul 26, 2013 at 4:36 PM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>
    > > wrote:
    > > >
    > > > > **
    > > >
    > > > > Our Ref 15143479
    > > > >
    > > > > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    > > > >
    > > > > Thank you for your email addressed to our Chief Executive, to which I
    > > > have
    > > > > been asked to respond. Please accept my apologies for the delay in
    > > doing
    > > > > so.
    > > > >
    > > > > I


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  • Jeg sendte en ny e-post til Tesco


    Gmail – Email to the Chief Executive’s Office






    Gmail

    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>






    Email to the Chief Executive’s Office






    Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Wed, Aug 14, 2013 at 6:42 PM



    To:
    Executive Response <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>

    Cc:
    customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk






    Ok,
    thank you very much. Sainsbury’s in Rice Lane has started closing the self service department early, some days now. I haven’t seen this in the Tesco-stores in Liverpool City Centre, (where I lived a few years ago).
    Does Tesco have a policy regarding this, I’m wondering. (Since Sainsbury’s doesn’t seem to have one). I’ve worked for many years in retail, so I’m a bit curious here, about the relatively new self service-departments. Also, I still think it’s strange that Tesco Walton have four types of different shopping-baskets. (I noticed yesterday that you have two types of metal-baskets. Most of them have blue handles. But one of them had red handles. Because I was wondering if was really Sainsbury’s baskets. Since I don’t think Tesco normally have metal-baskets. But I couldn’t tell for sure. And you also have two types of plastic-baskets. Which one can’t mix, because then they don’t fit, if one put them on top of eachother. For some reason. This is a bit like we in Norway call ‘pakkis-sjappe’, (‘paki/desi-shop’), I think). Regards, Erik Ribsskog
    On Wed, Aug 14, 2013 at 1:23 PM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk> wrote:



    Dear Mr Ribsskog Thank you for your further emails. Please accept my apologies for the delay in responding. I am sorry to learn that you have encountered a number of items being out of stock in our store, I can understand why you are disappointed. I have made Colin Richardson, the Store Manager, aware of your complaints regarding items being out of stock. This will allow him to address the issues in store to ensure that we have sufficient stock levels. Many thanks once again for contacting the Chief Executive’s Office. Kind regards David Upstone
    Customer Service Executive Tesco Logo ……………… Original Message ……………… To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Received: 13/08/2013
    Subject: Fwd: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office [SR 1-293497288] Hi, today I was at Tesco Walton again, around 9 PM. Today you were sold out of Everyday Value Pizza’s. (The ones that costs 60 pence). You are quite often sold out of this product, I’ve noticed. (And I’ve also complained to you about this, a few days ago, if I remember
    it right). These pizzas are good as a kind of ‘second dinner’ I think. So I first make some chicken steaks or something like that. And then the pizza to get full. Then I get a balanced diet, I think. But this store is ‘always’ sold out. I think I told you more than a year ago, that there is a bit few shelves in
    this store. (Or shop is a better word perhaps, because you don’t really store the goods
    that much I think. At least you don’t store enough of the pizza’s. I think you order to little almost all the time of them. You order like 10 pizzas. Then they’re sold out. And you order ten pizzas again. Something like this. Can one call it a store then? Surely a store would have had a minimum order for these pizzas, so that you
    would have more than e.g. half a days sales, of these pizzas in your
    store/shop). When I worked as a store manager in Rimi. I would stock up on popular products. In Norway we have Pizza Grandiosa which is very popular. I would have like ten boxes, (of ten pizzas), of this product, on the
    freezer-storage. So that if we were sold out, we could just go to the freezer-storage and
    find a box of Pizza Grandiosas there. This isn’t exactly rocket science I think. So it shouldn’t really be necessary for me to explain about this routine,
    for you, in this e-mail. Erik Ribsskog
    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>
    Date: Tue, Aug 13, 2013 at 5:27 PM
    Subject: Re: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office [SR
    1-293497288]
    To: customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk
    Cc: Executive Response <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>
    Hi, ok, I don’t understand why you don’t fill up the self-service check out
    machines with enough coins at the start of the day? Or why don’t you refill one machine at the time? (In stead of closing the whole department?). This seems strange to me. If you have a self service department, then that should be open, when the
    store is open, I think. I used to shop at the big Sainsbury in Kensington, (the one with a
    Starbucks cafe), for around a week, in February, in 2005. And they didn’t tell me then that these types of departments weren’t going
    to be open for all the hours the store is open. This seems strange, I think. And in the staffed till that day some boys with bikes, (I think it was),
    forgot a plastic-bottle of milk. When they were in that till before me. (Because that was the till with the shortest queue). I thought this was strange. And the female Cashier was  unaware so I had to tell her that someone had
    forgotten their milk. And she ran after the boys. So it’s easier to shop in the self-service tills I think. I’m from Norway and there they use a kind of divider, so that customers
    have longer time, to pack their goods, in the staffed tills. That’s one of the reasons I like the self-service-tills, because then you
    don’t get the next customers goods mixed with your own goods. So I think it’s strange that you sometimes close the self service
    department early. If you have a department like that it should be open as long as the store
    is open, I think. I’ve never seen this at Asda, that they close the self-service-department
    early. Erik Ribsskog PS. I send a copy e-mail to Tesco, since they haven’t replied yet, to my
    complaint about them. Tesco Walton doesn’t have a self-service department, for some reason. So there it’s a bit stressing to shop, I think. And your cashiers, at Sainsburys Rice Lane, they don’t stand in their
    tills, like the cashiers at Tesco Walton. Since you have chairs, in your tills, I guess the reason is. And you at Sainsbury’s only have one type of shopping-baskets. Where as Tesco Walton has three different types, (which doesn’t mix/stock,
    even if they are more or less the same size). They have some dark blue baskets, some less dark blue baskets, and some
    metal-baskets, which looks more or less like Sainsbury’s baskets in Rice
    Lane, I think. So I think enough ‘strange stuff’ is going on, at Tesco Walton. So I don’t like it when Sainsbury’s Rice Lane starts to do ‘strange stuff’
    as well. Just as an update.
    On Tue, Aug 13, 2013 at 9:15 AM, <customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote: > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    >
    >
    >
    > Thank you for your email.  I am sorry that when you visited our Rice Lane
    > store recently our self scanner checkouts closed early and you were
    > wondering why this happens.******
    >
    > ** **
    >
    > We always aim to exceed our customers’ expectations and we use customers’
    > feedback to continually improve our products and services.****
    >
    > ** **
    >
    > I called the store and spoke to Diane Colligan, Checkout Team Leader.  Diane
    > explained that the reason the self scanner checkouts were switched off was
    > to allow them to remove the money cassettes as they were empty and refill
    > them.  Diane apologises for any inconvenience caused.****
    >
    > ** **
    >
    > I hope this information is helpful.  We appreciate you taking the time to
    > email us and we hope to see you in store again soon.****
    >
    >
    >
    >
    > Yours sincerely
    >
    > ** **
    >
    > Lillian Tarditi | Customer Manager****
    >
    > Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    > customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262
    > twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys
    >
    > [THREAD ID:1-4UOWZA]
    >
    > —–Original Message—–
    > From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    > Sent: 09.08.2013 10:23:52 PM
    > To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    > Subject: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    >
    > Hi,
    >
    > today I was at Tesco Walton again, (and also a Sainsbury-shop).
    >
    > Budget chicken nuggets were sold out at Tesco Walton today, for the second
    > day in a row.
    >
    > When I walked in to the shop, a security guard placed himself between me
    > and the shopping-baskets, with his behind towards me.
    >
    > He was completely un-aware of that I wanted a basket.
    >
    > (Or he pretended to be unaware).
    >
    > Is it right that security-guards in Tesco tidy the shopping-baskets?
    >
    > Isn’t that a ‘normal’ Tesco-staff-job?
    >
    > I ask that because the security guard seemed to lack basic
    > customer-service skills, like being aware of a customer that walks into the
    > shop, (of whom half of them wants a basket, or something like that).
    >
    > It’s hard for me to belive this security-guard.
    >
    > Was he acting in-polite and provocing me, I’m wondering.
    >
    > Also you have changed packaging on your budget orange juice which you sell
    > from the ‘milk-department’, (that is the type you sell from a fridge).
    >
    > Also, I tried to complain to the woman in the check-out that the chicken
    > nuggets were sold out.
    >
    > But she didn’t answer me at all.
    >
    > Before she waited for a long time, before giving me the receipt.
    >
    > (This was at 21.13, it says on the receipt).
    >
    > Also, most of your cashiers are standing in their tills.
    >
    > As an experienced cashier I wonder why they don’t want to sit on their
    > chairs.
    >
    > Is this something cultural, I’m wondering.
    >
    > Regards,
    >
    > Erik Ribsskog
    >
    > PS.
    >
    > And to Sainsbury’s in Rice Lane.
    >
    > You closed your self-service tills at around 21.15, (I think it was), on
    > Wednesday.
    >
    > Why do you close them early, I’m wondering.
    >
    >
    > ———- Forwarded message ———-
    > From: <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>
    > Date: Wed, Jul 31, 2013 at 2:52 PM
    > Subject: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    > To: eribsskog@gmail.com
    >
    >
    > **
    > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    >
    > Thank you for your email.
    >
    > Regrettably, we have nothing further to add however please be assured that
    > your further comments have been noted.
    >
    > Many thanks once again for contacting the Chief Executive’s Office.
    >
    > Kind regards
    >
    > David Upstone
    > Customer Service Executive
    >
    > [image: Tesco Logo]
    >
    > ……………… Original Message ………………
    >
    > To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    > From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    > Received: 30/07/2013
    >
    >
    > Subject: Update/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    >
    > Hi,
    >
    > I’ve checked on Wikipedia now.
    >
    > And Storebrand had a profit of NOK 1471 million, in 2010, it says.
    >
    > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storebrand<http://cp.mcafee.com/d/FZsSd3gQcCQmhPBTCm6rCXCQQrI6zBBd4sCrjhKUOYYUyCrjhK_twsYOMrhLtdOUVBBYTpKAWG_6DNcOJUaFIEk8dNbkWRuraCWra523siReJnCOFJ_Q7TXFLZvC3hOUUCqeuLsKCCOPMVVOXbfbnhIyyHtN_BgY-F6lK1FJ4SCrLOoVcsCej79zztPo0fUsoAlAJW4JU03xyhmm34WNYx7o86_z8xixmF454hfBPr3b9EV76MpVwQgbH7Xa4Y5P22hEw6xcQgjGq89A_d40AjBXFEw6w_XdPApYQjQd40ottBrPtPp4S8Of0f6RNu>
    >
    > And Tesco had a net income of £124 million, it says.
    >
    > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesco<http://cp.mcafee.com/d/k-Kr3wUqdEIzDbLcIcTdTdFETod7baq8VcSCztNBVVN5cSCzt-X0VVBwSzuWrBNPbbVKPt9Rl-dfypBrMljpgEgrymFRGYSldQSka46UBGtqLdBjr_EfLTjvW_c6zBNNcQsZuVtddBDxPPBSmumKzp55mXz_axVZicHs3jqpJcTvANOoVcsCej76XCM0vMUN8H9rQ9rM0734yII1fQJkTYp4akaR8wEy9YKroppd78US3fc6y1to_pgDwKogid40Q9Cy2tjh1cDVEw4ysLtd40Q7_pKszfCyuxEw33HIHurKrYBlx0Zh1uIVc>
    >
    > So Tesco had a lower profit, even if Tesco has 537 784 employees.
    >
    > And Storebrand has 2160 employees.
    >
    > That says something about that Tesco aren’t that well run, I think.
    >
    > Could it be the problem with the baskets?
    >
    > Erik Ribsskog
    >
    >
    > ———- Forwarded message ———-
    > From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>
    > Date: Tue, Jul 30, 2013 at 4:39 PM
    > Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    > To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    >
    >
    > Hi,
    >
    > I’ve studied Information Management in Norway, for two years, in the late
    > 80’s and early 90’s.
    >
    > And as part of a Management/Organisation-module there, I contacted the big
    > Norwegian insurance-company UNI Storebrand, and they sent me their
    > organisation-map.
    >
    > They are also a big company, so I don’t buy this.
    >
    > I don’t need a very detailed organisation-map.
    >
    > A general one wo


    This is a confidential email. Tesco may monitor and record all emails. The views expressed in this email are those of the sender and not Tesco. Tesco Stores Limited
    Company Number: 519500
    Registered in England
    Registered Office: Tesco House, Delamare Road, Cheshunt, Hertfordshire EN8 9SL
    VAT Registration Number: GB 220 4302 31

  • Jeg sendte en ny e-post til Sainsbury’s


    Gmail – RE: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office [SR 1-293497288]






    Gmail

    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>






    RE: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office [SR 1-293497288]






    Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Tue, Aug 13, 2013 at 5:27 PM



    To:
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk

    Cc:
    Executive Response <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>






    Hi,
    ok, I don’t understand why you don’t fill up the self-service check out machines with enough coins at the start of the day? Or why don’t you refill one machine at the time?

    (In stead of closing the whole department?). This seems strange to me.

    If you have a self service department, then that should be open, when the store is open, I think.

    I used to shop at the big Sainsbury in Kensington, (the one with a Starbucks cafe), for around a week, in February, in 2005.

    And they didn’t tell me then that these types of departments weren’t going to be open for all the hours the store is open. This seems strange, I think.

    And in the staffed till that day some boys with bikes, (I think it was), forgot a plastic-bottle of milk.

    When they were in that till before me.

    (Because that was the till with the shortest queue). I thought this was strange. And the female Cashier was  unaware so I had to tell her that someone had forgotten their milk.


    And she ran after the boys. So it’s easier to shop in the self-service tills I think. I’m from Norway and there they use a kind of divider, so that customers have longer time, to pack their goods, in the staffed tills.

    That’s one of the reasons I like the self-service-tills, because then you don’t get the next customers goods mixed with your own goods.

    So I think it’s strange that you sometimes close the self service department early.


    If you have a department like that it should be open as long as the store is open, I think.

    I’ve never seen this at Asda, that they close the self-service-department early. Erik Ribsskog
    PS. I send a copy e-mail to Tesco, since they haven’t replied yet, to my complaint about them. Tesco Walton doesn’t have a self-service department, for some reason. So there it’s a bit stressing to shop, I think.

    And your cashiers, at Sainsburys Rice Lane, they don’t stand in their tills, like the cashiers at Tesco Walton. Since you have chairs, in your tills, I guess the reason is.

    And you at Sainsbury’s only have one type of shopping-baskets.

    Where as Tesco Walton has three different types, (which doesn’t mix/stock, even if they are more or less the same size). They have some dark blue baskets, some less dark blue baskets, and some metal-baskets, which looks more or less like Sainsbury’s baskets in Rice Lane, I think. So I think enough ‘strange stuff’ is going on, at Tesco Walton. So I don’t like it when Sainsbury’s Rice Lane starts to do ‘strange stuff’ as well. Just as an update.
    On Tue, Aug 13, 2013 at 9:15 AM, <customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog


    Thank you for your email.  I am sorry that when you visited our Rice Lane store recently our self scanner checkouts closed early and you were wondering why this happens.


    We always aim to exceed our customers’ expectations and we use customers’ feedback to continually improve our products and services.


    I called the store and spoke to Diane Colligan, Checkout Team Leader.  Diane explained that the reason the self scanner checkouts were switched off was to allow them to remove the money cassettes as they were empty and refill them.  Diane apologises for any inconvenience caused.


    I hope this information is helpful.  We appreciate you taking the time to email us and we hope to see you in store again soon.


    Yours sincerely


    Lillian Tarditi | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262
    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys [THREAD ID:1-4UOWZA] —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 09.08.2013 10:23:52 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    Hi,

    today I was at Tesco Walton again, (and also a Sainsbury-shop).

    Budget chicken nuggets were sold out at Tesco Walton today, for the second day in a row.

    When I walked in to the shop, a security guard placed himself between me and the shopping-baskets, with his behind towards me.

    He was completely un-aware of that I wanted a basket.

    (Or he pretended to be unaware).

    Is it right that security-guards in Tesco tidy the shopping-baskets?

    Isn’t that a ‘normal’ Tesco-staff-job?

    I ask that because the security guard seemed to lack basic customer-service skills, like being aware of a customer that walks into the shop, (of whom half of them wants a basket, or something like that).

    It’s hard for me to belive this security-guard.

    Was he acting in-polite and provocing me, I’m wondering.

    Also you have changed packaging on your budget orange juice which you sell from the ‘milk-department’, (that is the type you sell from a fridge).

    Also, I tried to complain to the woman in the check-out that the chicken nuggets were sold out.

    But she didn’t answer me at all.

    Before she waited for a long time, before giving me the receipt.

    (This was at 21.13, it says on the receipt).

    Also, most of your cashiers are standing in their tills.

    As an experienced cashier I wonder why they don’t want to sit on their chairs.

    Is this something cultural, I’m wondering.

    Regards,

    Erik Ribsskog PS. And to Sainsbury’s in Rice Lane. You closed your self-service tills at around 21.15, (I think it was), on Wednesday.


    Why do you close them early, I’m wondering.


    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>

    Date: Wed, Jul 31, 2013 at 2:52 PM
    Subject: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    To: eribsskog@gmail.com

    Dear Mr Ribsskog Thank you for your email. Regrettably, we have nothing further to add however please be assured that your further comments have been noted. Many thanks once again for contacting the Chief Executive’s Office.
    Kind regards David Upstone
    Customer Service Executive Tesco Logo ……………… Original Message ……………… To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Received: 30/07/2013
    Subject: Update/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office Hi, I’ve checked on Wikipedia now. And Storebrand had a profit of NOK 1471 million, in 2010, it says. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storebrand And Tesco had a net income of £124 million, it says. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesco So Tesco had a lower profit, even if Tesco has 537 784 employees. And Storebrand has 2160 employees. That says something about that Tesco aren’t that well run, I think. Could it be the problem with the baskets? Erik Ribsskog
    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>
    Date: Tue, Jul 30, 2013 at 4:39 PM
    Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    Hi, I’ve studied Information Management in Norway, for two years, in the late
    80’s and early 90’s. And as part of a Management/Organisation-module there, I contacted the big
    Norwegian insurance-company UNI Storebrand, and they sent me their
    organisation-map. They are also a big company, so I don’t buy this. I don’t need a very detailed organisation-map. A general one would be ok, then I would at least get the overview on how
    your customer service is organised. Erik Ribsskog On Tue, Jul 30, 2013 at 4:33 PM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk> wrote: > **
    > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    >
    > Thank you for your email. I am sorry that you are unhappy with my
    > response, this certainly was not my intention.
    >
    > I am sorry that you do not wish to meet with Colin, he is certainly best
    > placed to deal with your concerns. As you are aware, the position on our
    > baskets has already been explained to you, and this remains unchanged.
    >
    > As Tesco is such a large company, I cannot provide you with an overall
    > organisation structure. However as explained, this office is the highest
    > point of escalation for customer complaints.
    >
    > Many thanks once again for contacting the Chief Executive’s Office.
    >
    > Kind regards
    >
    > David Upstone
    > Customer Service Executive
    >
    > [image: Tesco Logo]
    >
    > ……………… Original Message ………………
    >
    > To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    > From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    > Received: 29/07/2013
    >
    >
    > Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    >
    > Hi,
    >
    > I’ve asked for an organisation-map.
    >
    > And Tesco are registered at the London Stock Exchange, (I’ve read on
    > Wikipedia), so you should have one, I think.
    >
    > I want to please have your organisation-map before I go on with this.
    >
    > Or if you have a link to a web-site with that map on, that would also be
    > fine.
    >
    > Also, when I complain to you, then I don’t have to deal with the Store
    > Manager.
    >
    > I’ve worked as a Store Manager myself, (in the Rimi-chain, owned by ICA).
    >
    > And the Area Manager, (Anne-Kathrine Skodvin), wouldn’t always tell me who
    > had complained about the shop I ran, (as I remember it).
    >
    > So there’s no need for me to deal with the Store Manager directly as I see
    > it.
    >
    > As I’ve explained I’d prefer if Tesco’s central organisation could be like
    > a buffer between me and the staff in the mentioned shop, (Tesco Walton).
    >
    > Thanks in advance for the help with this!
    >
    > Regards,
    >
    > Erik Ribsskog
    >
    >
    > On Mon, Jul 29, 2013 at 4:01 PM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk> wrote:
    >
    > > **
    > > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    > >
    > > Thank you for your email.
    > >
    > > As advised, Colin Richardson, the Walton Store Manager, would be happy to
    > > meet with you in store to discuss any concerns you may have.  I really do
    > > hope that you will choose to meet with him.
    > >
    > > The Chief Executive’s Office is the highest point of escalation as we
    > > reply on behalf of our board members. Regrettably there is nothing
    > further
    > > I can add on this matter.
    > >
    > > Many thanks once again for contacting the Chief Executive’s Office.
    > >
    > >
    > > Kind regards
    > >
    > > David Upstone
    > > Customer Service Executive
    > >
    > > [image: Tesco Logo]
    > >
    > > ……………… Original Message ………………
    > >
    > > To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    > > From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    > > Received: 29/07/2013
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    > >
    > > Hi,
    > >
    > > and how do you explain that Tesco wants to have many different types of
    > > baskets with the same volume that doesn’t mix/stock?
    > >
    > > Also, it’s not the first time I’ve complained about the Sun Sip-cola
    > being
    > > sold out.
    > >
    > > I think it’s better if your office serves as a buffer, between me and the
    > > Tesco Walton-employees, if that’s alright.
    > >
    > > I would have liked to asked your line-manager if that’s alright.
    > >
    > > And I would have wanted him/her to explain about the ‘basket-case’.
    > >
    > > Thanks in advance for the help with this.
    > >
    > > Erik Ribsskog
    > >
    > >
    > > On Mon, Jul 29, 2013 at 11:59 AM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>
    > wrote:
    > >
    > > > **
    > > > **
    > >
    > > > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    > > >
    > > > Thank you for your patience while this matter has been investigated.
    > > >
    > > > It was disappointing to learn that our Walton store did not have the
    > > items
    > > > you wanted in stock during your visit on the 23rd July, I am sorry for
    > > the
    > > > inconvenience caused.
    > > >
    > > > I have raised with matter with Colin Richardson, the Walton Store
    > > Manager,
    > > > he has asked me to pass on his apologies to you. Colin has advised that
    > > the
    > > > items are now back in stock and that he would be happy to meet with you
    > > in
    > > > store to discuss any concerns you may have. He has also advised that he
    > > > would like to give you a couple of bottles as a way to apologise for
    > this
    > > > matter arising.
    > > >
    > > > I have reviewed the previous correspondence you have had with this
    > office
    > > > and I can confirm that our position is unchanged with regard to our
    > > > baskets. I am sorry that you will be disappointed with my response.
    > > >
    > > > Thank you for taking the time to contact the Chief Executive’s Office.
    > If
    > > > you have any further queries please don’t hesitate to get back in
    > touch.
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > Kind regards
    > > >
    > > > David Upstone
    > > > Customer Service Executive
    > > >
    > > > [image: Tesco Logo]
    > > >
    > > > ……………… Original Message ………………
    > > >
    > > > To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    > > > From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    > > > Received: 26/07/2013
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > Ok,
    > > >
    > > > I’ve sent you a lot of complaints earlier, you see.
    > > >
    > > > And I started sending them to this e-mail address, a couple of years
    > > ago, I
    > > > think.
    > > >
    > > > So now I send all the Tesco-complaints to this e-mail-address.
    > > >
    > > > Tesco Walton and Tesco Superstore Liverpool One also have a problem I
    > > > wanted to complain about, by the way.
    > > >
    > > > And that’s the baskets.
    > > >
    > > > Tesco Walton now have three different types of baskets.
    > > >
    > > > One type which is made of dark blue plastic.
    > > >
    > > > One type which is made of a bit less dark blue plastic.
    > > >
    > > > And a type which is made of metal.
    > > >
    > > > And these three basket-types doesn’t stock with the other basket-types.
    > > >
    > > > So it’s a bit chaotic in the check-out-area, with the baskets.
    > > >
    > > > Since they don’t stock.
    > > >
    > > > If I put a dark blue basket on top of a less dark blue.
    > > >
    > > > Then the dark blue basket doesn’t fit, in the less dark blue.
    > > >
    > > > Even if they are about the same size, in litres, (it looks like to me).
    > > >
    > > > Also the metal ones are about the same size in litres, (like it looks
    > to
    > > > me).
    > > >
    > > > I think it’s odd that a big organisation like Tesco isn’t stream-lined.
    > > >
    > > > I have to focus on the baskets when I shop at Tesco Walton.
    > > >
    > > > It’s like you have to be an expert on Tesco-baskets to shop there, I’d
    > > say.
    > > >
    > > > It’s like you want to bully the custommers from Sainsbury and Asda who
    > > want
    > > > to try Tesco for a change.
    > > >
    > > > Then you aren’t going to get many new customers, perhaps.
    > > >
    > > > If this isn’t something you do to make people use the trolleys then.
    > > >
    > > > Because I’ve worked in a grocery-chain named Rimi, in Norway.
    > > >
    > > > And they were a bit sceptical with having baskets, in the shops.
    > > >
    > > > They only wanted trolleys, (for the customers).
    > > >
    > > > Since customers with trolleys usually buy more, than if they use a
    > > basket,
    > > > to put their groceries in.
    > > >
    > > > But three types of baskets.
    > > >
    > > > Which doesn’t stock.
    > > >
    > > > I think this is how a shop in the third world would have done it.
    > > >
    > > > Why aren’t you more stream-lined, (and ‘Western’), I’m wondering.
    > > >
    > > > And it’s almost the same at Tesco Liverpool One.
    > > >
    > > > Except that I haven’t seen the metal-baskets there.
    > > >
    > > > But they have two types of blue baskets, (with the same volume), that
    > > > doesn’t mix, when one stock them.
    > > >
    > > > And that’s odd for a new shop like that.
    > > >
    > > > Liverpool One has only been around for two or three years.
    > > >
    > > > And this is also a Super-store.
    > > >
    > > > So then it looks like to me that Tesco has problems when they want to
    > > have
    > > > a ‘chaos-system’, like this, with the shopping-baskets.
    > > >
    > > > (I’ve studied Information Management and have gone to commerce-school
    > and
    > > > have worked as a retail-manager.
    > > >
    > > > We learned at commerce-school that ‘the custommer is always right’.
    > > >
    > > > But I don’t think Tesco agrees with this, when I see many different
    > types
    > > > of baskets, that doesn’t stock, in your shops.
    > > >
    > > > Then I wonder if the whole Tesco-chain has lost a bit control, to be
    > > > honest.
    > > >
    > > > Erik Ribsskog
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > On Fri, Jul 26, 2013 at 4:36 PM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>
    > > wrote:
    > > >
    > > > > **
    > > >
    > > > > Our Ref 15143479
    > > > >
    > > > > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    > > > >
    > > > > Thank you for your email addressed to our Chief Executive, to which I
    > > > have
    > > > > been asked to respond. Please accept my apologies for the delay in
    > > doing
    > > > > so.
    > > > >
    > > > > I


    This is a confidential email. Tesco may monitor and record all emails. The views expressed in this email are those of the sender and not Tesco. Tesco Stores Limited
    Company Number: 519500

    Registered in England
    Registered Office: Tesco House, Delamare Road, Cheshunt, Hertfordshire EN8 9SL
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  • Jeg sendte en ny e-post til Tesco


    Gmail – New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office






    Gmail

    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>






    New complaint/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office






    Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Fri, Aug 9, 2013 at 10:23 PM



    To:
    ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk

    Cc:
    customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk






    Hi,
    today I was at Tesco Walton again, (and also a Sainsbury-shop).
    Budget chicken nuggets were sold out at Tesco Walton today, for the second day in a row.
    When I walked in to the shop, a security guard placed himself between me and the shopping-baskets, with his behind towards me.
    He was completely un-aware of that I wanted a basket.
    (Or he pretended to be unaware).
    Is it right that security-guards in Tesco tidy the shopping-baskets?
    Isn’t that a ‘normal’ Tesco-staff-job?

    I ask that because the security guard seemed to lack basic customer-service skills, like being aware of a customer that walks into the shop, (of whom half of them wants a basket, or something like that).

    It’s hard for me to belive this security-guard.
    Was he acting in-polite and provocing me, I’m wondering.
    Also you have changed packaging on your budget orange juice which you sell from the ‘milk-department’, (that is the type you sell from a fridge).

    Also, I tried to complain to the woman in the check-out that the chicken nuggets were sold out.
    But she didn’t answer me at all.
    Before she waited for a long time, before giving me the receipt.

    (This was at 21.13, it says on the receipt).
    Also, most of your cashiers are standing in their tills.
    As an experienced cashier I wonder why they don’t want to sit on their chairs.

    Is this something cultural, I’m wondering.
    Regards,
    Erik Ribsskog PS. And to Sainsbury’s in Rice Lane. You closed your self-service tills at around 21.15, (I think it was), on Wednesday.


    Why do you close them early, I’m wondering.

    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>

    Date: Wed, Jul 31, 2013 at 2:52 PM
    Subject: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    To: eribsskog@gmail.com


    Dear Mr Ribsskog Thank you for your email. Regrettably, we have nothing further to add however please be assured that your further comments have been noted.
    Many thanks once again for contacting the Chief Executive’s Office. Kind regards David Upstone
    Customer Service Executive Tesco Logo ……………… Original Message ……………… To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Received: 30/07/2013
    Subject: Update/Fwd: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office Hi, I’ve checked on Wikipedia now. And Storebrand had a profit of NOK 1471 million, in 2010, it says. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storebrand And Tesco had a net income of £124 million, it says. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesco So Tesco had a lower profit, even if Tesco has 537 784 employees. And Storebrand has 2160 employees. That says something about that Tesco aren’t that well run, I think. Could it be the problem with the baskets? Erik Ribsskog
    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>
    Date: Tue, Jul 30, 2013 at 4:39 PM
    Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    Hi, I’ve studied Information Management in Norway, for two years, in the late
    80’s and early 90’s. And as part of a Management/Organisation-module there, I contacted the big
    Norwegian insurance-company UNI Storebrand, and they sent me their
    organisation-map. They are also a big company, so I don’t buy this. I don’t need a very detailed organisation-map. A general one would be ok, then I would at least get the overview on how
    your customer service is organised. Erik Ribsskog On Tue, Jul 30, 2013 at 4:33 PM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk> wrote: > **
    > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    >
    > Thank you for your email. I am sorry that you are unhappy with my
    > response, this certainly was not my intention.
    >
    > I am sorry that you do not wish to meet with Colin, he is certainly best
    > placed to deal with your concerns. As you are aware, the position on our
    > baskets has already been explained to you, and this remains unchanged.
    >
    > As Tesco is such a large company, I cannot provide you with an overall
    > organisation structure. However as explained, this office is the highest
    > point of escalation for customer complaints.
    >
    > Many thanks once again for contacting the Chief Executive’s Office.
    >
    > Kind regards
    >
    > David Upstone
    > Customer Service Executive
    >
    > [image: Tesco Logo]
    >
    > ……………… Original Message ………………
    >
    > To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    > From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    > Received: 29/07/2013
    >
    >
    > Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    >
    > Hi,
    >
    > I’ve asked for an organisation-map.
    >
    > And Tesco are registered at the London Stock Exchange, (I’ve read on
    > Wikipedia), so you should have one, I think.
    >
    > I want to please have your organisation-map before I go on with this.
    >
    > Or if you have a link to a web-site with that map on, that would also be
    > fine.
    >
    > Also, when I complain to you, then I don’t have to deal with the Store
    > Manager.
    >
    > I’ve worked as a Store Manager myself, (in the Rimi-chain, owned by ICA).
    >
    > And the Area Manager, (Anne-Kathrine Skodvin), wouldn’t always tell me who
    > had complained about the shop I ran, (as I remember it).
    >
    > So there’s no need for me to deal with the Store Manager directly as I see
    > it.
    >
    > As I’ve explained I’d prefer if Tesco’s central organisation could be like
    > a buffer between me and the staff in the mentioned shop, (Tesco Walton).
    >
    > Thanks in advance for the help with this!
    >
    > Regards,
    >
    > Erik Ribsskog
    >
    >
    > On Mon, Jul 29, 2013 at 4:01 PM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk> wrote:
    >
    > > **
    > > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    > >
    > > Thank you for your email.
    > >
    > > As advised, Colin Richardson, the Walton Store Manager, would be happy to
    > > meet with you in store to discuss any concerns you may have.  I really do
    > > hope that you will choose to meet with him.
    > >
    > > The Chief Executive’s Office is the highest point of escalation as we
    > > reply on behalf of our board members. Regrettably there is nothing
    > further
    > > I can add on this matter.
    > >
    > > Many thanks once again for contacting the Chief Executive’s Office.
    > >
    > >
    > > Kind regards
    > >
    > > David Upstone
    > > Customer Service Executive
    > >
    > > [image: Tesco Logo]
    > >
    > > ……………… Original Message ………………
    > >
    > > To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    > > From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    > > Received: 29/07/2013
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    > >
    > > Hi,
    > >
    > > and how do you explain that Tesco wants to have many different types of
    > > baskets with the same volume that doesn’t mix/stock?
    > >
    > > Also, it’s not the first time I’ve complained about the Sun Sip-cola
    > being
    > > sold out.
    > >
    > > I think it’s better if your office serves as a buffer, between me and the
    > > Tesco Walton-employees, if that’s alright.
    > >
    > > I would have liked to asked your line-manager if that’s alright.
    > >
    > > And I would have wanted him/her to explain about the ‘basket-case’.
    > >
    > > Thanks in advance for the help with this.
    > >
    > > Erik Ribsskog
    > >
    > >
    > > On Mon, Jul 29, 2013 at 11:59 AM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>
    > wrote:
    > >
    > > > **
    > > > **
    > >
    > > > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    > > >
    > > > Thank you for your patience while this matter has been investigated.
    > > >
    > > > It was disappointing to learn that our Walton store did not have the
    > > items
    > > > you wanted in stock during your visit on the 23rd July, I am sorry for
    > > the
    > > > inconvenience caused.
    > > >
    > > > I have raised with matter with Colin Richardson, the Walton Store
    > > Manager,
    > > > he has asked me to pass on his apologies to you. Colin has advised that
    > > the
    > > > items are now back in stock and that he would be happy to meet with you
    > > in
    > > > store to discuss any concerns you may have. He has also advised that he
    > > > would like to give you a couple of bottles as a way to apologise for
    > this
    > > > matter arising.
    > > >
    > > > I have reviewed the previous correspondence you have had with this
    > office
    > > > and I can confirm that our position is unchanged with regard to our
    > > > baskets. I am sorry that you will be disappointed with my response.
    > > >
    > > > Thank you for taking the time to contact the Chief Executive’s Office.
    > If
    > > > you have any further queries please don’t hesitate to get back in
    > touch.
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > Kind regards
    > > >
    > > > David Upstone
    > > > Customer Service Executive
    > > >
    > > > [image: Tesco Logo]
    > > >
    > > > ……………… Original Message ………………
    > > >
    > > > To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    > > > From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    > > > Received: 26/07/2013
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > Subject: Re: Email to the Chief Executive’s Office
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > Ok,
    > > >
    > > > I’ve sent you a lot of complaints earlier, you see.
    > > >
    > > > And I started sending them to this e-mail address, a couple of years
    > > ago, I
    > > > think.
    > > >
    > > > So now I send all the Tesco-complaints to this e-mail-address.
    > > >
    > > > Tesco Walton and Tesco Superstore Liverpool One also have a problem I
    > > > wanted to complain about, by the way.
    > > >
    > > > And that’s the baskets.
    > > >
    > > > Tesco Walton now have three different types of baskets.
    > > >
    > > > One type which is made of dark blue plastic.
    > > >
    > > > One type which is made of a bit less dark blue plastic.
    > > >
    > > > And a type which is made of metal.
    > > >
    > > > And these three basket-types doesn’t stock with the other basket-types.
    > > >
    > > > So it’s a bit chaotic in the check-out-area, with the baskets.
    > > >
    > > > Since they don’t stock.
    > > >
    > > > If I put a dark blue basket on top of a less dark blue.
    > > >
    > > > Then the dark blue basket doesn’t fit, in the less dark blue.
    > > >
    > > > Even if they are about the same size, in litres, (it looks like to me).
    > > >
    > > > Also the metal ones are about the same size in litres, (like it looks
    > to
    > > > me).
    > > >
    > > > I think it’s odd that a big organisation like Tesco isn’t stream-lined.
    > > >
    > > > I have to focus on the baskets when I shop at Tesco Walton.
    > > >
    > > > It’s like you have to be an expert on Tesco-baskets to shop there, I’d
    > > say.
    > > >
    > > > It’s like you want to bully the custommers from Sainsbury and Asda who
    > > want
    > > > to try Tesco for a change.
    > > >
    > > > Then you aren’t going to get many new customers, perhaps.
    > > >
    > > > If this isn’t something you do to make people use the trolleys then.
    > > >
    > > > Because I’ve worked in a grocery-chain named Rimi, in Norway.
    > > >
    > > > And they were a bit sceptical with having baskets, in the shops.
    > > >
    > > > They only wanted trolleys, (for the customers).
    > > >
    > > > Since customers with trolleys usually buy more, than if they use a
    > > basket,
    > > > to put their groceries in.
    > > >
    > > > But three types of baskets.
    > > >
    > > > Which doesn’t stock.
    > > >
    > > > I think this is how a shop in the third world would have done it.
    > > >
    > > > Why aren’t you more stream-lined, (and ‘Western’), I’m wondering.
    > > >
    > > > And it’s almost the same at Tesco Liverpool One.
    > > >
    > > > Except that I haven’t seen the metal-baskets there.
    > > >
    > > > But they have two types of blue baskets, (with the same volume), that
    > > > doesn’t mix, when one stock them.
    > > >
    > > > And that’s odd for a new shop like that.
    > > >
    > > > Liverpool One has only been around for two or three years.
    > > >
    > > > And this is also a Super-store.
    > > >
    > > > So then it looks like to me that Tesco has problems when they want to
    > > have
    > > > a ‘chaos-system’, like this, with the shopping-baskets.
    > > >
    > > > (I’ve studied Information Management and have gone to commerce-school
    > and
    > > > have worked as a retail-manager.
    > > >
    > > > We learned at commerce-school that ‘the custommer is always right’.
    > > >
    > > > But I don’t think Tesco agrees with this, when I see many different
    > types
    > > > of baskets, that doesn’t stock, in your shops.
    > > >
    > > > Then I wonder if the whole Tesco-chain has lost a bit control, to be
    > > > honest.
    > > >
    > > > Erik Ribsskog
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > On Fri, Jul 26, 2013 at 4:36 PM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>
    > > wrote:
    > > >
    > > > > **
    > > >
    > > > > Our Ref 15143479
    > > > >
    > > > > Dear Mr Ribsskog
    > > > >
    > > > > Thank you for your email addressed to our Chief Executive, to which I
    > > > have
    > > > > been asked to respond. Please accept my apologies for the delay in
    > > doing
    > > > > so.
    > > > >
    > > > > I


    This is a confidential email. Tesco may monitor and record all emails. The views expressed in this email are those of the sender and not Tesco. Tesco Stores Limited
    Company Number: 519500
    Registered in England
    Registered Office: Tesco House, Delamare Road, Cheshunt, Hertfordshire EN8 9SL
    VAT Registration Number: GB 220 4302 31

  • Jeg sendte en ny klage til Sainsbury’s


    Gmail – RE: Re: Complaint/Fwd: [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-287397693] [SR 1-287511685]

    Gmail


    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>



    RE: Re: Complaint/Fwd: [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-287397693] [SR 1-287511685]



    Erik Ribsskog

    <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Sun, Apr 21, 2013 at 1:22 PM

    To:
    customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk

    Hi,


    if I’m allowed to be frank, and tell my opinion.

    Then I’d say that I think it’s a bit strange that you don’t follow the office-hours.

    Then I just think you are a ‘bunch’ of under-paid people, who sit in a call-centre, and really write something, to get the custommers to stop complaining.


    (Without really knowing about the cases).

    That’s the impression I get of Sainsbury’s custommer-support then.

    When you send to me in the week-end.

    So that’s also a complaint, I guess.


    (One of quite many now).

    Regards,

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Sun, Apr 21, 2013 at 1:02 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thanks for your email and for the further information you provided.

    I’ve logged your comments about this incident on our system for the attention of the appropriate department.  This information is now available to them to discuss at their next review. Please be assured we’ll continue to monitor customer feedback on this subject to ensure we’re addressing any concerns that arise.
    If there’s anything else we can assist you with, please email us at customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk or give the Careline a call on 0800 63 62 62, holding at the menu.
    We appreciate your feedback as it helps us to constantly improve our customers’ experience.  We’re grateful you took the time to contact us and hope to see you in store again soon.

    Kind regards

    Matthew Tranter | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 19.04.2013 02:48:09 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Complaint/Fwd: [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-287397693]

    Hi,

    this was an e-mail I sent to Farmfoods and copied to you:

    from:

    Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>

    to:

    along@farmfoods.co.uk

    cc:

    customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk

    date:

    Wed, Apr 17, 2013 at 7:29 PM

    In the e-mail I mention that Farmfoods are better at chicken steaks, than Sainsburys are.


    It also seems that Farmfoods are better at reading e-mail-headers than Sainsburys are.


    Or are you just pretending you didn’t understand this?

    It seems a bit strange that a big company like Sainsbury doesn’t know how to read the header of an e-mail.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Fri, Apr 19, 2013 at 12:33 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thanks for your email.

    I’m having difficulty understand your email. It seems your email is directed for the attention of Farmfoods but you’ve written to us at Sainsbury’s instead.

    If you would like to address an issue in any of our stores, please give us a call on 0800 636262 where one of my colleagues will be happy to assist you.

    We appreciate you taking the time to email us and hope to see you in store a soon.

    Kind regards

    Stephen Higgins | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 17.04.2013 07:29:59 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Complaint/Fwd: [SR 1-284217844]

    Hi,

    today I shopped at Farmfoods in Walton Rd., in Kirkdale.


    The brunette lesbian, (I think she must be), seemingly hid behind a frezer and pushed to boxes of Wheetabix, down on a freezer, as if to make a load noise, as if to scare me.

    And then this cashier suddently appeared from behind that freezer, to put the boxes up.


    I’m an old Store Manager, who has worked for around 15 years, in grocery-shops.


    So I thought this was a bit strange.

    It was like she terrorised the custommers on purpose, I think.

    I couldn’t see any other custommers, in the shop, when I was there, (at around 5.40 PM, I think it was).


    Perhaps this cashier has scared all the custommers away from the shop?

    I’m not sure if this was on purpose, but it seemed that way, to me.


    So I thought I should write an e-mail about this.


    I have earlier written to you, since you stopped selling my favoritte chicken-steaks, (Chicken Wiglets).


    But I’ve found a new favoritte now, hot and spicy chicken steaks, (which you sell 3 for 2 pounds).

    They are much better than the chicken steaks at Sainsburys I think.


    So therefore I drop by Farmfoods, before I go to Sainsburys, sometimes.


    Just to buy this good tasting dinner.


    But I didn’t like that the cashier seemingly tryed to kill me by trying to scare me, so that I would get a heart-attack, or something.

    If that’s what she tried to do.


    She didn’t want to say ‘bye’ or ‘tara’ eighter.


    Only ‘see you’.

    (When I said all three).

    I think ‘bye’ is more polite than ‘see you’, if I’m not mistaking.

    And the cashier didn’t apologise for the load noise eighter, when she put the cereal-boxes back up on the shelf, over the freezer.


    Maybe you should let the cereal-packs stay in the box, if the fall down, and make a load sound, like this.


    It was almost like it sounded like a bomb, now in these terror-times.


    Regards,


    Erik Ribsskog

    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>

    Date: Thu, Mar 14, 2013 at 4:29 PM
    Subject: Re: [SR 1-284217844]
    To: customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk
    Cc: Andy Long <along@farmfoods.co.uk>, Victoria Duffy <Victoria.Duffy@asda.co.uk>

    Hi,

    I’m just back, after shopping at Farmfoods and Sainsbury’s.

    At Sainsbury’s a Securitas-guard patroled right in front of me, when I walked in to the shop.


    I thought that was almost like a provocation.

    (This was your Rice Lane shop, as usual).

    Also, in the self-service till, a Sainsbury-woman, (quite big), in her 40’s, suddently started lifting on my basket, to get to a basket, which was underneath mine.

    (From the custommer before me).


    I’ve seen at Asda.


    At the self-service tills there.


    That a sing says: ‘Always explain the intervention’.


    Your staff didn’t do this.


    She made me almost get a shock, I think I have to say.


    This was like something that could only have happened in Russia.


    I brought my own basket back to the entrance-area, (around where the Security-guard was).

    And it was no shortage of baskets there.


    So I think I have to call this a basket-case.


    Why do your staff act like they’re trained in Russia?

    This was like a provocation, I think.


    You should learn from Asda, which are owned by Wal-Mart, which is an American company.

    Also,  (unilke Asda, Tesco, etc), the self service tills in this shop.


    (Sainsbury’s Rice Lane).


    They are aqwardly placed.


    The carrier-bags are placed to far away from the custommers, I think.

    I think your better at own brand tinned food, than Asda.


    But you just forget my complaints about your noodles, (own brand), which tastes like dish-washing-water, I think.


    (Something like this).


    In your last e-mail.

    There’s no excuse for ignorance, a saying, (here in the UK), says.


    But I don’t think you’ve heard that saying.

    So I want to escalate all the complaints I’ve sent you, please.


    Also, your mashed potatoes, smell bad, which isn’t the case, with Asda’s own-label mashed potatoes.

    And Aldi are better at chicken-steaks, I think.

    Also, you don’t have the chicken-nuggets, (own label), which costs around 70 pence, that Tesco and Asda have.

    I wanted to please escalate all the complaints I’ve sent you, please.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Thu, Mar 14, 2013 at 12:34 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your reply and further comments. I am sorry you are unhappy with the quality of some of our products.

    We strive to provide our customers with great quality products at all times.  I understand this has not been your experience and I have therefore, logged your comments on to our internal system and shared them with the relevant departments.

    We now consider this matter to be closed and will be having no further correspondence in regards to these matters.

    Kind regards

    Jamie Morris | Senior Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 13.03.2013 02:57:04 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040] [SR 1-284817165] [SR 1-284934883] [SR 1-285127521]

    Hi,

    also, at Christmas, your quite old femal staff with blonde hair.


    In the check-out.


    (I bought so much food for Christmas that I used a trolley and went to the manual check-out).


    She had to have antennas on her, since it was Christmas, it seemed.

    She was almost crying, from this ridiculus costume, it seemed to me.


    It reminded me of when I worked as an assistant manager, at Rimi Bjørndal, in Norway, from 1996 to 1998.


    The Store Manager Kristian Kvehaugen said the check-out-staff had to wear santa-caps.

    But the Marocco-girl, in the check-out, took her red santa head-cap of all the time.

    But your staff didn’t do this.

    So it was a bit like a shop from Mars, last Christmas, I think.

    Also your chicken-steaks, for £1.15, doesn’t taste that delicous, I think.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Mar 13, 2013 at 1:35 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Thanks for your email.  We appreciate you taking the time to get in touch as your feedback is important to us.

    We want to ensure you receive great service, so we need to investigate your query a little further.  We’ll be back in touch as soon as possible.  

    Thanks for your patience.

    The Customer Service Team

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd.

    0800 636 262

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com

    Sent: 13.03.2013 01:34:45 PM
    To: customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk
    Subject: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040] [SR 1-284817165] [SR 1-284934883] [SR 1-285127521]

    Hi,

    is your head-office in Moscow or something?

    Your reply just look like a mess to me.

    Those higher managers, (or what they were), were definetly just standing around.


    I know what I saw, I’m an experienced retail-manager, who has worked for almost a lifetime in retail.


    You just invent a reply, it seems to me.


    I have no confidence in you due to this.

    These people weren’t even in uniform/work-clothes.


    Even if that isn’t isn’t reflected in your reply, I think.

    Also, Sainsbury’s low-priced noodles, doesn’t taste good.


    And Sainsbury’s low-priced potato-mash smells bad, I think.

    (I tried it last week-end, but I just threw it, due to the smell, I have to admit).

    Good luck with the Moscowits, Marsians and Gremlins.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Mar 13, 2013 at 12:33 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your further email.

    As detailed in my response of 2 March, your comments have been escalated to me as Senior Manager within Careline.  

    In this reply I detailed our final response to the incident in out Rice Lane store on 14 February relating to the inability to process your card payment.  Equally this was addressed in my colleague Katrina Dicks reply on 4 March.

    Similarly in my reply of 2 March I detailed the reason our self scan checkouts where not functioning on your visit to the store. Although it may have appeared my colleagues in store were simply standing around, I assure you this was not the case.

    The extensive detail provided in each of these responses, and those previously sent by my team, provide our final answer on these points. I hope you can use the information provided and I have explained actions of my colleagues in store.

     

    Kind regards

    Stacey Canon | Senior Careline Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT

    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262
    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 08.03.2013 03:42:07 AM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040] [SR 1-284817165] [SR 1-284934883]

    Hi,

    I’ve sent to your college, Katarina Dick, about this, earlier this week.

    (And asked her to escalate).


    So this is being dealt with already, I think I have to say.


    Regards,


    Erik Ribsskog

    PS.


    Here is more about this:

    Hi,

    ok, I think it’s strange that all your machines doesn’t seem to work.

    It was also a problem with your bank-terminal, at this shop, the week before, (I think it was).

    (Like I have discussed with your college Ajay Chand, like one can see, in one of the forwarded e-mails, with this e-mail).

    A bank-terminal that refuses to let people pay by card, when they have money, on their account.

    That must be pretty rear, I think.

    And that this store also have a group of six self-service tills, that doesn’t work, the next week.

    (Which I haven’t seen in any other store.

    And these tills have been around since 2005, at least, I remember.

    Because I saw them that year, at a big Sainsbury’s in Kensington, in London, where I lived for a couple of weeks, that year).

    So this seems very strange to me.

    It’s like an invasion of Gremlins, I think.

    And how about the group of higher managers, which were standing in between the two groups of self-service tills, on the mentioned Wednesday, (the ones who were monitoring me and the other custommers), do you have an explanation for this?

    Have you had problems with an invasion from Mars?

    I think it must have been something like this, since there has been so much strange ‘stuff’ going on in your store.

    Due to that there have been many problems, I would have wanted to escalate about this, please.

    It has been so much problems with the food-industry lately, (with the horse-meat-scandal etc), so I think this should be on a higher level in your organisation.

    It’s a problem with the whole industry, a lefleat I saw today at Tesco says.

    So due to this I want to escalate, please.

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Mar 6, 2013 at 2:51 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thanks for your email and the further information you provided.  I’m sorry to learn you’re unhappy with our response.

    As advised in our previous emails, if a card if declined in store we’re unable to establish the reason for this.  The instruction to decline the card comes direct from the card provider.  As I’m sure you can appreciate, we need to act on such requests.  

    The only way to resolve this is to contact your card provider.  They’ll be able to carry out a full investigation and establish the reason the card was declined.  Unfortunately, we’re unable to do this on your behalf.  

    Your card provider wouldn’t be able to provide us with any of this information.  This would constitute a breach of the Data Protection Act.  Your card provider will only be able to discuss this with you.  I’m sorry we’re not able to assist you further.  

    We appreciate you’ve taken the time to contact us again and hope you’re able to get this resolved soon.

    Kind regards

    Pamela Scott | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 05.03.2013 12:53:19 AM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040] [SR 1-284817165]

    Hi,

    I’ve sent about this complaint earlier today, (Monday):

    Erik Ribsskog

    PS.


    Here is more about this:

    Hi,

    ok, I think it’s strange that all your machines doesn’t seem to work.


    It was also a problem with your bank-terminal, at this shop, the week before, (I think it was).



    (Like I have discussed with your college Ajay Chand, like one can see, in one of the forwarded e-mails, with this e-mail).

    A bank-terminal that refuses to let people pay by card, when they have money, on their account.

    That must be pretty rear, I think.

    And that this store also have a group of six self-service tills, that doesn’t work, the next week.


    (Which I haven’t seen in any other store.


    And these tills have been around since 2005, at least, I remember.


    Because I saw them that year, at a big Sainsbury’s in Kensington, in London, where I lived for a couple of weeks, that year).

    So this seems very strange to me.


    It’s like an invasion of Gremlins, I think.


    And how about the group of higher managers, which were standing in between the two groups of self-service tills, on the mentioned Wednesday, (the ones who were monitoring me and the other custommers), do you have an explanation for this?



    Have you had problems with an invasion from Mars?

    I think it must have been something like this, since there has been so much strange ‘stuff’ going on in your store.


    Due to that there have been many problems, I would have wanted to escalate about this, please.

    It has been so much problems with the food-industry lately, (with the horse-meat-scandal etc), so I think this should be on a higher level in your organisation.

    It’s a problem with the whole industry, a lefleat I saw today at Tesco says.

    So due to this I want to escalate, please.


    Erik Ribsskog



    On Mon, Mar 4, 2013 at 10:58 AM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your email reply.  I am sorry my colleagues have been unable to resolve this matter to your satisfaction.  I can appreciate your frustration as you have provided us with several pieces of information about your transaction.

    I can confirm that the information my colleague Jamie and Stacey provided you is correct.  When a customer’s payment card is declined at our checkouts we are unable to identify why this decision was made.  The instruction to refuse payment comes from the card provider.

    I know you understand there is also a merchant who facilitates these requests on behalf of your card provider.  I appreciate you experience of retail in Norway but unfortunately the process you outline when incidents like this occur is not mirrored in our stores.

    When a card is declined in store we are unable to establish the reason. There can be several factors which can cause this, for example the merchant provider may be down.  We would request you follow the guidance offered by my colleagues and contact your card provider for further information.
    We appreciate you taking the time to come back to us and hope the information we have provided is useful.

    Kind regards

    Katrina Dick | Senior Customer Manager
    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262
    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 02.03.2013 05:28:17 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040]

    Hi,

    like I wrote in the first e-mail about this problem.

    If it was a problem with the connection, then the bank-terminals in Norway, more than twenty years ago, wrote a receipt, which was almost like a cheque, for the custommer to sign.


    The amount would then take a bit longer time, (a couple of days, I think we told the custommers), to be withdrawn, from the custommers’ bank-accounts.

    So is the UK more than 20 years behind Norway, when it comes to this?

    This doesn’t seem likely, to me.

    I wonder if there have been some ‘Gremlins’ here, messing with my account.


    I think it’s poor custommer-service, that you don’t investigate what has happened here.


    I have also gone to business-school, and learned that the custommer is always right.

    I think the UK is poor on custommer-service.


    You should learn from the USA, I think.

    It doesn’t seem you have a custommer-service attitude, (towards custommers), here in the UK.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Sat, Mar 2, 2013 at 3:40 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your further email.  I am sorry my colleagues have been unable to resolve this matter to your satisfaction.  I can appreciate your frustration as you have provided us with several pieces of information about your transaction. As requested your correspondence has been escalated to me.

    Our customers experience is important to us.  We expect our customers to have the best service possible and it is disappointing to us that this has not been your experience.

    As my colleagues have explained, when a customer’s payment card is declined at our checkouts we are unable to identify why this decision was made.  The instruction to refuse payment comes from the card provider.

    I know you understand there is also a merchant who facilitates these requests on behalf of your card provider.  I appreciate you experience of retail in Norway but unfortunately the process you outline when incidents like this occur is not mirrored in our stores.

    As you mention your card was then accepted on the second attempt, it may be there was a temporary error with the connection from your card supplier. To this end we would request you follow the guidance offered by my colleagues and contact your card provider for further information.

    I appreciate this was not the answer you were hoping for but I must stress that my colleagues have guided you correctly through all stages of your contact with us.  I hope you can speak with you banking group and source the answer you require.

    I appreciate you taking the time to get in touch.

     

    Kind regards

    Stacey Cannon | Careline Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 01.03.2013 04:50:16 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826]

    Hi,

    thank you for your e-mail!

    I think that since this was something that happened, in your store, then you have a responsibility, to help finding out what has happened.


    I think it’s poor custommer-support, that I have to go in the bank, and ask them, what has happened.


    I’ve sent you the recepts and all, so this is something you could find out, I think.

    You are just being lazy here, it seems to me.


    Dear I ask to get this escalated again?

    Regards,


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Fri, Mar 1, 2013 at 3:06 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your further email.  I am sorry you are unhappy with my colleagues’ previous responses.

    I have looked into this matter and I can confirm that the information my colleagues’ gave you is correct.  When a card is declined in store we are unable to establish the reason.  There can be several factors which can cause this, for example the merchant provider may be down.

    As my colleagues have advised, the only way to establish what went wrong would be to contact your card provider directly as we would not be able to offer any further assistance with this matter.

    I hope this information is useful to you and we look forward to seeing you in store again soon.

    Kind regards

    Jamie Morris | Senior Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 28.02.2013 12:27:46 AM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091]

    Hi,

    I’ve worked as a store manager myself in Norway.


    And if I had gotten a complaint like that, I would have called the company which runs the bank-terminals, and asked them what the problem was.

    So this wasn’t good custommer-support, I think.


    Can I escalate this to your line-manager, please?

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Feb 27, 2013 at 9:38 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thanks for your email and further comments relating to your recent enquiry.

    I’ve contacted the Rice lane store and discussed this with Nicola Edwards, the Customer Services Desk.  She’s asked me to send her apologies and was disappointed to hear of your experience.  She’s advised when a card is declined in store we aren’t able to establish the reason.  There can be several factors which can cause this for example the merchant provider may be down.

    I appreciate the time you have taken to contact us and I hope this information is helpful.

    Kind regards

    Ajay Chand | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 23.02.2013 04:27:35 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844]

    Hi,

    thank you for your e-mail!

    I don’t think it could have been the card-provider, that the problem was with.


    Because like one can see, on the recepits, that I attach copies of.


    The card worked again, a minute after if first had been refused.

    So it was just a temporarely problem, it seems.


    But like I wrote to you earlier, I’ve worked full time, as a cashier, for almost a year, at OBS Triaden, in Norway.

    And this was in 1990/91.


    But we had bank-terminals, in every other till.

    And even 20 years ago, this didn’t happen.


    If the bank terminals were off-line, then the custommer was told to sign a recepit, and this was then like a cheque, more or less.


    So I think it’s to bad, that this worked in Norway, 20 years ago.


    But it doesn’t work in the UK, today.

    I know there is a company, in-between you and the banks.

    (I know, because I’ve also worked as a retail manager in Norway, for ten years, in the Rimi-chain, owned by ICA).

    So I think it could be some ‘Gremlins’ there perhaps.

    This company was called ‘Bank Accept’, (or something), in Norway.

    You probably have an equivalent, (to Bank Accept), here in the UK.


    So I send again about this.


    Perhaps you could escalate this to your line-manager.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Sat, Feb 23, 2013 at 4:15 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Erik Ribsskog

    Thanks for your email.  I’m sorry your visa card payment was refused at our Rice Lane store on your recent visit.  I understand your disappointment as there was enough money in your bank.

    We are not aware of any faults with our card machines at the minute.  I can only recommend that you contact your card provider.

    We appreciate you taking the time to get in touch and make us aware of this and hope to see you in store soon.

    Kind regards

    Daniel Carr | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 19.02.2013 03:24:16 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Shopping instore

    The following comments have been made:
    Full Name: Erik Ribsskog
    Email: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Telephone:
    Subject: Complaint
    User’s Comments: I was in your supermarket, in Rice Lane, in Liverpool, on Saturday, (14/2).
    My visa card payment was first refused, even if there was enough money, on the account.
    I haven’t experienced this before.
    (Even if I’ve worked for almost a lifetime, in retail, in Norway).
    Do you need the recepit-number etc., to investigate this?
    Regards,
    Erik Ribsskog
    Address:
    Nectar Card Number:
    Order/Reference Number:
    Delivery Date:
    QUALITY
    Store Name:
    Purchase Date:
    Product Name and/or barcode number:
    Other codes (batch; be; supplier):
    AVAILABILITY
    Product Name and/or barcode number:
    Store Name:
    Incident Date:
    GENERAL INFORMATION
    Store Name:
    Purchase Date:
    Product Name and/or barcode number:
    Other codes(batch; bbe; supplier):
    Reference: CTU-1361287453578-393

    **********************************************************************
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    Don’t print this email unless you really need to; think of the environment and save a tree!


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    If you have received this email in error please notify the system manager (postmaster@sainsburys.co.uk).


    This footnote also confirms that this email message has been swept for the presence of computer viruses, but does not warrant that the message is virus free.


    Email sent to Sainsbury’s systems may be monitored by the company.


    J Sainsbury plc (185647 England)
    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Limited (3261722 England)


    Registered Offices:
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    **********************************************************************

  • Jeg sendte en e-post til Sainsbury’s


    Gmail – RE: Complaint/Fwd: [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-287397693]

    Gmail


    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>



    RE: Complaint/Fwd: [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-287397693]



    Erik Ribsskog

    <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Fri, Apr 19, 2013 at 2:46 PM

    To:
    customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk

    Hi,

    this was an e-mail I sent to Farmfoods and copied to you:

    from:

    Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com> to: along@farmfoods.co.uk

    cc:

    customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk

    date:

    Wed, Apr 17, 2013 at 7:29 PM

    In the e-mail I mention that Farmfoods are better at chicken steaks, than Sainsburys are.


    It also seems that Farmfoods are better at reading e-mail-headers than Sainsburys are.

    Or are you just pretending you didn’t understand this?

    It seems a bit strange that a big company like Sainsbury doesn’t know how to read the header of an e-mail.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Fri, Apr 19, 2013 at 12:33 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thanks for your email.

    I’m having difficulty understand your email. It seems your email is directed for the attention of Farmfoods but you’ve written to us at Sainsbury’s instead.

    If you would like to address an issue in any of our stores, please give us a call on 0800 636262 where one of my colleagues will be happy to assist you.

    We appreciate you taking the time to email us and hope to see you in store a soon.

    Kind regards

    Stephen Higgins | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 17.04.2013 07:29:59 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Complaint/Fwd: [SR 1-284217844]

    Hi,

    today I shopped at Farmfoods in Walton Rd., in Kirkdale.


    The brunette lesbian, (I think she must be), seemingly hid behind a frezer and pushed to boxes of Wheetabix, down on a freezer, as if to make a load noise, as if to scare me.

    And then this cashier suddently appeared from behind that freezer, to put the boxes up.


    I’m an old Store Manager, who has worked for around 15 years, in grocery-shops.


    So I thought this was a bit strange.

    It was like she terrorised the custommers on purpose, I think.

    I couldn’t see any other custommers, in the shop, when I was there, (at around 5.40 PM, I think it was).


    Perhaps this cashier has scared all the custommers away from the shop?

    I’m not sure if this was on purpose, but it seemed that way, to me.


    So I thought I should write an e-mail about this.


    I have earlier written to you, since you stopped selling my favoritte chicken-steaks, (Chicken Wiglets).


    But I’ve found a new favoritte now, hot and spicy chicken steaks, (which you sell 3 for 2 pounds).

    They are much better than the chicken steaks at Sainsburys I think.


    So therefore I drop by Farmfoods, before I go to Sainsburys, sometimes.


    Just to buy this good tasting dinner.


    But I didn’t like that the cashier seemingly tryed to kill me by trying to scare me, so that I would get a heart-attack, or something.

    If that’s what she tried to do.


    She didn’t want to say ‘bye’ or ‘tara’ eighter.


    Only ‘see you’.

    (When I said all three).

    I think ‘bye’ is more polite than ‘see you’, if I’m not mistaking.

    And the cashier didn’t apologise for the load noise eighter, when she put the cereal-boxes back up on the shelf, over the freezer.


    Maybe you should let the cereal-packs stay in the box, if the fall down, and make a load sound, like this.


    It was almost like it sounded like a bomb, now in these terror-times.


    Regards,


    Erik Ribsskog

    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>

    Date: Thu, Mar 14, 2013 at 4:29 PM
    Subject: Re: [SR 1-284217844]
    To: customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk
    Cc: Andy Long <along@farmfoods.co.uk>, Victoria Duffy <Victoria.Duffy@asda.co.uk>

    Hi,

    I’m just back, after shopping at Farmfoods and Sainsbury’s.

    At Sainsbury’s a Securitas-guard patroled right in front of me, when I walked in to the shop.


    I thought that was almost like a provocation.

    (This was your Rice Lane shop, as usual).

    Also, in the self-service till, a Sainsbury-woman, (quite big), in her 40’s, suddently started lifting on my basket, to get to a basket, which was underneath mine.

    (From the custommer before me).


    I’ve seen at Asda.


    At the self-service tills there.


    That a sing says: ‘Always explain the intervention’.


    Your staff didn’t do this.


    She made me almost get a shock, I think I have to say.


    This was like something that could only have happened in Russia.


    I brought my own basket back to the entrance-area, (around where the Security-guard was).

    And it was no shortage of baskets there.


    So I think I have to call this a basket-case.


    Why do your staff act like they’re trained in Russia?

    This was like a provocation, I think.


    You should learn from Asda, which are owned by Wal-Mart, which is an American company.

    Also,  (unilke Asda, Tesco, etc), the self service tills in this shop.


    (Sainsbury’s Rice Lane).


    They are aqwardly placed.


    The carrier-bags are placed to far away from the custommers, I think.

    I think your better at own brand tinned food, than Asda.


    But you just forget my complaints about your noodles, (own brand), which tastes like dish-washing-water, I think.


    (Something like this).


    In your last e-mail.

    There’s no excuse for ignorance, a saying, (here in the UK), says.


    But I don’t think you’ve heard that saying.

    So I want to escalate all the complaints I’ve sent you, please.


    Also, your mashed potatoes, smell bad, which isn’t the case, with Asda’s own-label mashed potatoes.

    And Aldi are better at chicken-steaks, I think.

    Also, you don’t have the chicken-nuggets, (own label), which costs around 70 pence, that Tesco and Asda have.

    I wanted to please escalate all the complaints I’ve sent you, please.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Thu, Mar 14, 2013 at 12:34 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your reply and further comments. I am sorry you are unhappy with the quality of some of our products.

    We strive to provide our customers with great quality products at all times.  I understand this has not been your experience and I have therefore, logged your comments on to our internal system and shared them with the relevant departments.

    We now consider this matter to be closed and will be having no further correspondence in regards to these matters.

    Kind regards

    Jamie Morris | Senior Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 13.03.2013 02:57:04 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040] [SR 1-284817165] [SR 1-284934883] [SR 1-285127521]

    Hi,

    also, at Christmas, your quite old femal staff with blonde hair.


    In the check-out.


    (I bought so much food for Christmas that I used a trolley and went to the manual check-out).


    She had to have antennas on her, since it was Christmas, it seemed.

    She was almost crying, from this ridiculus costume, it seemed to me.


    It reminded me of when I worked as an assistant manager, at Rimi Bjørndal, in Norway, from 1996 to 1998.


    The Store Manager Kristian Kvehaugen said the check-out-staff had to wear santa-caps.

    But the Marocco-girl, in the check-out, took her red santa head-cap of all the time.

    But your staff didn’t do this.

    So it was a bit like a shop from Mars, last Christmas, I think.

    Also your chicken-steaks, for £1.15, doesn’t taste that delicous, I think.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Mar 13, 2013 at 1:35 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Thanks for your email.  We appreciate you taking the time to get in touch as your feedback is important to us.

    We want to ensure you receive great service, so we need to investigate your query a little further.  We’ll be back in touch as soon as possible.  

    Thanks for your patience.

    The Customer Service Team

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd.

    0800 636 262

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com

    Sent: 13.03.2013 01:34:45 PM
    To: customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk
    Subject: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040] [SR 1-284817165] [SR 1-284934883] [SR 1-285127521]

    Hi,

    is your head-office in Moscow or something?

    Your reply just look like a mess to me.

    Those higher managers, (or what they were), were definetly just standing around.


    I know what I saw, I’m an experienced retail-manager, who has worked for almost a lifetime in retail.


    You just invent a reply, it seems to me.


    I have no confidence in you due to this.

    These people weren’t even in uniform/work-clothes.


    Even if that isn’t isn’t reflected in your reply, I think.

    Also, Sainsbury’s low-priced noodles, doesn’t taste good.


    And Sainsbury’s low-priced potato-mash smells bad, I think.

    (I tried it last week-end, but I just threw it, due to the smell, I have to admit).

    Good luck with the Moscowits, Marsians and Gremlins.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Mar 13, 2013 at 12:33 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your further email.

    As detailed in my response of 2 March, your comments have been escalated to me as Senior Manager within Careline.  

    In this reply I detailed our final response to the incident in out Rice Lane store on 14 February relating to the inability to process your card payment.  Equally this was addressed in my colleague Katrina Dicks reply on 4 March.

    Similarly in my reply of 2 March I detailed the reason our self scan checkouts where not functioning on your visit to the store. Although it may have appeared my colleagues in store were simply standing around, I assure you this was not the case.

    The extensive detail provided in each of these responses, and those previously sent by my team, provide our final answer on these points. I hope you can use the information provided and I have explained actions of my colleagues in store.

     

    Kind regards

    Stacey Canon | Senior Careline Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT

    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262
    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 08.03.2013 03:42:07 AM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040] [SR 1-284817165] [SR 1-284934883]

    Hi,

    I’ve sent to your college, Katarina Dick, about this, earlier this week.

    (And asked her to escalate).


    So this is being dealt with already, I think I have to say.


    Regards,


    Erik Ribsskog

    PS.


    Here is more about this:

    Hi,

    ok, I think it’s strange that all your machines doesn’t seem to work.

    It was also a problem with your bank-terminal, at this shop, the week before, (I think it was).

    (Like I have discussed with your college Ajay Chand, like one can see, in one of the forwarded e-mails, with this e-mail).

    A bank-terminal that refuses to let people pay by card, when they have money, on their account.

    That must be pretty rear, I think.

    And that this store also have a group of six self-service tills, that doesn’t work, the next week.

    (Which I haven’t seen in any other store.

    And these tills have been around since 2005, at least, I remember.

    Because I saw them that year, at a big Sainsbury’s in Kensington, in London, where I lived for a couple of weeks, that year).

    So this seems very strange to me.

    It’s like an invasion of Gremlins, I think.

    And how about the group of higher managers, which were standing in between the two groups of self-service tills, on the mentioned Wednesday, (the ones who were monitoring me and the other custommers), do you have an explanation for this?

    Have you had problems with an invasion from Mars?

    I think it must have been something like this, since there has been so much strange ‘stuff’ going on in your store.

    Due to that there have been many problems, I would have wanted to escalate about this, please.

    It has been so much problems with the food-industry lately, (with the horse-meat-scandal etc), so I think this should be on a higher level in your organisation.

    It’s a problem with the whole industry, a lefleat I saw today at Tesco says.

    So due to this I want to escalate, please.

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Mar 6, 2013 at 2:51 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thanks for your email and the further information you provided.  I’m sorry to learn you’re unhappy with our response.

    As advised in our previous emails, if a card if declined in store we’re unable to establish the reason for this.  The instruction to decline the card comes direct from the card provider.  As I’m sure you can appreciate, we need to act on such requests.  

    The only way to resolve this is to contact your card provider.  They’ll be able to carry out a full investigation and establish the reason the card was declined.  Unfortunately, we’re unable to do this on your behalf.  

    Your card provider wouldn’t be able to provide us with any of this information.  This would constitute a breach of the Data Protection Act.  Your card provider will only be able to discuss this with you.  I’m sorry we’re not able to assist you further.  

    We appreciate you’ve taken the time to contact us again and hope you’re able to get this resolved soon.

    Kind regards

    Pamela Scott | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 05.03.2013 12:53:19 AM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040] [SR 1-284817165]

    Hi,

    I’ve sent about this complaint earlier today, (Monday):

    Erik Ribsskog

    PS.


    Here is more about this:

    Hi,

    ok, I think it’s strange that all your machines doesn’t seem to work.


    It was also a problem with your bank-terminal, at this shop, the week before, (I think it was).



    (Like I have discussed with your college Ajay Chand, like one can see, in one of the forwarded e-mails, with this e-mail).

    A bank-terminal that refuses to let people pay by card, when they have money, on their account.

    That must be pretty rear, I think.

    And that this store also have a group of six self-service tills, that doesn’t work, the next week.


    (Which I haven’t seen in any other store.


    And these tills have been around since 2005, at least, I remember.


    Because I saw them that year, at a big Sainsbury’s in Kensington, in London, where I lived for a couple of weeks, that year).

    So this seems very strange to me.


    It’s like an invasion of Gremlins, I think.


    And how about the group of higher managers, which were standing in between the two groups of self-service tills, on the mentioned Wednesday, (the ones who were monitoring me and the other custommers), do you have an explanation for this?



    Have you had problems with an invasion from Mars?

    I think it must have been something like this, since there has been so much strange ‘stuff’ going on in your store.


    Due to that there have been many problems, I would have wanted to escalate about this, please.

    It has been so much problems with the food-industry lately, (with the horse-meat-scandal etc), so I think this should be on a higher level in your organisation.

    It’s a problem with the whole industry, a lefleat I saw today at Tesco says.

    So due to this I want to escalate, please.


    Erik Ribsskog



    On Mon, Mar 4, 2013 at 10:58 AM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your email reply.  I am sorry my colleagues have been unable to resolve this matter to your satisfaction.  I can appreciate your frustration as you have provided us with several pieces of information about your transaction.

    I can confirm that the information my colleague Jamie and Stacey provided you is correct.  When a customer’s payment card is declined at our checkouts we are unable to identify why this decision was made.  The instruction to refuse payment comes from the card provider.

    I know you understand there is also a merchant who facilitates these requests on behalf of your card provider.  I appreciate you experience of retail in Norway but unfortunately the process you outline when incidents like this occur is not mirrored in our stores.

    When a card is declined in store we are unable to establish the reason. There can be several factors which can cause this, for example the merchant provider may be down.  We would request you follow the guidance offered by my colleagues and contact your card provider for further information.
    We appreciate you taking the time to come back to us and hope the information we have provided is useful.

    Kind regards

    Katrina Dick | Senior Customer Manager
    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262
    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 02.03.2013 05:28:17 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040]

    Hi,

    like I wrote in the first e-mail about this problem.

    If it was a problem with the connection, then the bank-terminals in Norway, more than twenty years ago, wrote a receipt, which was almost like a cheque, for the custommer to sign.


    The amount would then take a bit longer time, (a couple of days, I think we told the custommers), to be withdrawn, from the custommers’ bank-accounts.

    So is the UK more than 20 years behind Norway, when it comes to this?

    This doesn’t seem likely, to me.

    I wonder if there have been some ‘Gremlins’ here, messing with my account.


    I think it’s poor custommer-service, that you don’t investigate what has happened here.


    I have also gone to business-school, and learned that the custommer is always right.

    I think the UK is poor on custommer-service.


    You should learn from the USA, I think.

    It doesn’t seem you have a custommer-service attitude, (towards custommers), here in the UK.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Sat, Mar 2, 2013 at 3:40 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your further email.  I am sorry my colleagues have been unable to resolve this matter to your satisfaction.  I can appreciate your frustration as you have provided us with several pieces of information about your transaction. As requested your correspondence has been escalated to me.

    Our customers experience is important to us.  We expect our customers to have the best service possible and it is disappointing to us that this has not been your experience.

    As my colleagues have explained, when a customer’s payment card is declined at our checkouts we are unable to identify why this decision was made.  The instruction to refuse payment comes from the card provider.

    I know you understand there is also a merchant who facilitates these requests on behalf of your card provider.  I appreciate you experience of retail in Norway but unfortunately the process you outline when incidents like this occur is not mirrored in our stores.

    As you mention your card was then accepted on the second attempt, it may be there was a temporary error with the connection from your card supplier. To this end we would request you follow the guidance offered by my colleagues and contact your card provider for further information.

    I appreciate this was not the answer you were hoping for but I must stress that my colleagues have guided you correctly through all stages of your contact with us.  I hope you can speak with you banking group and source the answer you require.

    I appreciate you taking the time to get in touch.

     

    Kind regards

    Stacey Cannon | Careline Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 01.03.2013 04:50:16 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826]

    Hi,

    thank you for your e-mail!

    I think that since this was something that happened, in your store, then you have a responsibility, to help finding out what has happened.


    I think it’s poor custommer-support, that I have to go in the bank, and ask them, what has happened.


    I’ve sent you the recepts and all, so this is something you could find out, I think.

    You are just being lazy here, it seems to me.


    Dear I ask to get this escalated again?

    Regards,


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Fri, Mar 1, 2013 at 3:06 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your further email.  I am sorry you are unhappy with my colleagues’ previous responses.

    I have looked into this matter and I can confirm that the information my colleagues’ gave you is correct.  When a card is declined in store we are unable to establish the reason.  There can be several factors which can cause this, for example the merchant provider may be down.

    As my colleagues have advised, the only way to establish what went wrong would be to contact your card provider directly as we would not be able to offer any further assistance with this matter.

    I hope this information is useful to you and we look forward to seeing you in store again soon.

    Kind regards

    Jamie Morris | Senior Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 28.02.2013 12:27:46 AM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091]

    Hi,

    I’ve worked as a store manager myself in Norway.


    And if I had gotten a complaint like that, I would have called the company which runs the bank-terminals, and asked them what the problem was.

    So this wasn’t good custommer-support, I think.


    Can I escalate this to your line-manager, please?

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Feb 27, 2013 at 9:38 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thanks for your email and further comments relating to your recent enquiry.

    I’ve contacted the Rice lane store and discussed this with Nicola Edwards, the Customer Services Desk.  She’s asked me to send her apologies and was disappointed to hear of your experience.  She’s advised when a card is declined in store we aren’t able to establish the reason.  There can be several factors which can cause this for example the merchant provider may be down.

    I appreciate the time you have taken to contact us and I hope this information is helpful.

    Kind regards

    Ajay Chand | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 23.02.2013 04:27:35 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844]

    Hi,

    thank you for your e-mail!

    I don’t think it could have been the card-provider, that the problem was with.


    Because like one can see, on the recepits, that I attach copies of.


    The card worked again, a minute after if first had been refused.

    So it was just a temporarely problem, it seems.


    But like I wrote to you earlier, I’ve worked full time, as a cashier, for almost a year, at OBS Triaden, in Norway.

    And this was in 1990/91.


    But we had bank-terminals, in every other till.

    And even 20 years ago, this didn’t happen.


    If the bank terminals were off-line, then the custommer was told to sign a recepit, and this was then like a cheque, more or less.


    So I think it’s to bad, that this worked in Norway, 20 years ago.


    But it doesn’t work in the UK, today.

    I know there is a company, in-between you and the banks.

    (I know, because I’ve also worked as a retail manager in Norway, for ten years, in the Rimi-chain, owned by ICA).

    So I think it could be some ‘Gremlins’ there perhaps.

    This company was called ‘Bank Accept’, (or something), in Norway.

    You probably have an equivalent, (to Bank Accept), here in the UK.


    So I send again about this.


    Perhaps you could escalate this to your line-manager.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Sat, Feb 23, 2013 at 4:15 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Erik Ribsskog

    Thanks for your email.  I’m sorry your visa card payment was refused at our Rice Lane store on your recent visit.  I understand your disappointment as there was enough money in your bank.

    We are not aware of any faults with our card machines at the minute.  I can only recommend that you contact your card provider.

    We appreciate you taking the time to get in touch and make us aware of this and hope to see you in store soon.

    Kind regards

    Daniel Carr | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 19.02.2013 03:24:16 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Shopping instore

    The following comments have been made:
    Full Name: Erik Ribsskog
    Email: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Telephone:
    Subject: Complaint
    User’s Comments: I was in your supermarket, in Rice Lane, in Liverpool, on Saturday, (14/2).
    My visa card payment was first refused, even if there was enough money, on the account.
    I haven’t experienced this before.
    (Even if I’ve worked for almost a lifetime, in retail, in Norway).
    Do you need the recepit-number etc., to investigate this?
    Regards,
    Erik Ribsskog
    Address:
    Nectar Card Number:
    Order/Reference Number:
    Delivery Date:
    QUALITY
    Store Name:
    Purchase Date:
    Product Name and/or barcode number:
    Other codes (batch; be; supplier):
    AVAILABILITY
    Product Name and/or barcode number:
    Store Name:
    Incident Date:
    GENERAL INFORMATION
    Store Name:
    Purchase Date:
    Product Name and/or barcode number:
    Other codes(batch; bbe; supplier):
    Reference: CTU-1361287453578-393

    **********************************************************************
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    This footnote also confirms that this email message has been swept for the presence of computer viruses, but does not warrant that the message is virus free.


    Email sent to Sainsbury’s systems may be monitored by the company.


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    Registered Offices:
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  • Jeg sendte en ny e-post til Sainsbury’s


    Gmail – RE: Update/Fwd: Re: Re: [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-285513533] [SR 1-285724516] [SR 1-285895918]

    Gmail


    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>



    RE: Update/Fwd: Re: Re: [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-285513533] [SR 1-285724516] [SR 1-285895918]



    Erik Ribsskog

    <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Fri, Mar 22, 2013 at 3:33 PM

    To:
    customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk

    Hi,

    ok.

    At least it’s still possible to buy water at Sainsbury’s.

    (Unlike at Aldi, where I was refused this).

    And I have to shop somewhere.


    So I’ll just wait and see, and perhaps your problem with ‘Gremlins’ will be better, in the future.


    We’ll see.

    Thanks for the e-mail!

    Regards,


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Fri, Mar 22, 2013 at 3:28 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your email with further comments.

    We have forwarded your comments previously about the issues you raised in our Rice Lane store to the managers.  I have also logged your further comments into our internal system and these will be made available to the relevant department in store.

    If you have any further issues about services or customer service, please contact Mr Phil Seddon, Store Manager at this branch on 0151 523 1886 who will be more than happy to address your concerns.

    Kind regards

    Katrina Dick | Senior Customer Manager
    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262
    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 21.03.2013 07:12:22 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Update/Fwd: Re: Re: [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-285513533] [SR 1-285724516]

    Hi,

    I know I’ve asked you to escalate.

    But I was in your shop in Rice Lane again now, and I thought it was a bit intimidating, that your big African security-guard, and three Sainsbury-staff, (it seemed), were standing in a group, in the middle of the shop, without saying anything, (but just observing).


    I’ve seen aomething similar at Tesco.


    (The Superstore in Liverpool One).


    A group of managers in suits, motivate some other staff, outside of the fresh-food-department.


    But your managers didn’t say anything.


    And I went back to buy a bottle of water, that was also on my shopping-list, and then these people didn’t stand around in the shop, (without doing anything), any longer.


    This seemed almost militant, to me, and a bit intimidating, really.


    It reminded me about an episode at Aldi, earlier this week.


    They also had an African security-guard, and two or three other staff standing that close to me, discussing that they were sold out of 0.5 litre water-bottles.


    You also had a young ‘retard’ and his two parents there.


    Like it was also at Aldi, that mentioned day, a bit older retard, in one of their slow moving queues.


    And when I went out of the shop the second time, a Sainsbury-woman started screaming to a collegue, to buy her water.

    (When I was just purchasing a water-bottle, in the self-service check-outs).


    Your shop is almost a bit weird, I think.


    Have you read about the Aldi-episode, on my blog?

    Are you doing some kind of wicka-stuff, I’m wondering.

    Are you monitoring me in your shop?

    There has also been a similar episode, where you were monitoring the customers, (like I’ve complained about).


    Are you monitoring the custommers?

    And why only when I’m in the shop, it seems.


    This seems very odd to me.


    Please escalate this complaints with my other complaints, (like I wrote to you, earlier today).

    Erik Ribsskog

    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>

    Date: Thu, Mar 21, 2013 at 12:55 PM
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-285513533] [SR 1-285724516]
    To: customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk

    Hi,

    I understand that this was escalated to you.


    But I’ve asked to please get this escalated again.

    I can’t see that you’ve done this.

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Mar 20, 2013 at 10:33 AM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thanks for your email.  I’m sorry you’re unhappy with our previous responses.  I can confirm that I’m a senior customer manager and this has been escalated to myself.

    We want to make our customers shopping trips as convenient as possible and we introduced our self checkouts as an efficient and speedy alternative to manned checkouts.  However, we recognise that they are not ideal for all our customers and we aim to provide a choice, which includes opening more manned checkouts for our customers who prefer them.  You certainly should not feel pressured into using these tills.


    We have a TRY promise were if you’re unhappy with any of our own brand products, you can get a full refund by taking the packaging and receipt to the customer service desk in any store.  If you could reply with more information on the chicken steaks you’re referring to, I can investigate this further.  Ideally if you have any information on the packaging, I can log this with our buyers.

    I’ve called our Rice Lane store and spoken to my colleague, Kim Tingsley, the Customer Service Supervisor.  Kim advised that there was a problem with one of the bank terminals in the store.  Although the banks aren’t managed by the store, this was reported immediately and has since been fixed.  I appreciate you’d like more information on this but as the banks are managed externally, we’re unable to provide any more information.

    Kim wasn’t aware of any problems with the self service checkouts.  If you could reply confirming which date you entered the store and what was wrong with the tills and also more information on the antennas you mentioned, I can investigate this further with the store.  I appreciate these issues have been going on for some time.  If you could reply with your contact number, we’d be happy to call you in order to resolve these for you.

    We’re grateful that you’ve taken the time to contact us and look forward to your response.

    Kind regards

    Jack Barr | Senior Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 18.03.2013 03:32:31 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-285513533]

    Hi,

    ok, and how about the awkward self-service-tills?

    Have you gotten a lot of complaints about them?

    And the antennas for Christmas.


    Am I the only one who have complained?

    And the chicken-steaks aren’t that delicous, I think.

    Has this really been escalated now, by the way?

    How can you explain two ‘Gremlin-attacks’ in a few days, in this shop?

    (The problem with the bank-terminals and the six self-service tills).


    I think it’s bad custommer support that you don’t explain to me, what was wrong, with the bank-terminal.


    One single phone-call.

    How hard can this be?

    This seems very strange to me.


    It’s like you don’t really try, I think.

    I’ve asked to escalate this.


    I can’t see that that has really happened.


    So I try again.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Mon, Mar 18, 2013 at 3:11 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Erik Ribsskog

    Thanks for your email.  I’m sorry that you were unhappy with your trip to our Rice Lane store.  I can understand your disappointment as you saw some of the behaviour as a “provocation”.

    It is never our intent for our customers to feel awkward in store, we wish for our customers to enjoy their shopping experience.  Our security guards patrol for the safety of all our customers and are not there to provoke anybody.  I apologise that a colleague moved your basket without asking. I have passed your comments onto management who appreciate all customer feedback.

    We’re grateful to you for taking the time to contact us and we look forward to seeing you again shortly.

    Kind regards

    Careline Hot Topic Queue | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 14.03.2013 04:29:58 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: [SR 1-284217844]

    Hi,

    I’m just back, after shopping at Farmfoods and Sainsbury’s.

    At Sainsbury’s a Securitas-guard patroled right in front of me, when I walked in to the shop.


    I thought that was almost like a provocation.

    (This was your Rice Lane shop, as usual).

    Also, in the self-service till, a Sainsbury-woman, (quite big), in her 40’s, suddently started lifting on my basket, to get to a basket, which was underneath mine.

    (From the custommer before me).


    I’ve seen at Asda.


    At the self-service tills there.


    That a sing says: ‘Always explain the intervention’.


    Your staff didn’t do this.


    She made me almost get a shock, I think I have to say.


    This was like something that could only have happened in Russia.


    I brought my own basket back to the entrance-area, (around where the Security-guard was).

    And it was no shortage of baskets there.


    So I think I have to call this a basket-case.


    Why do your staff act like they’re trained in Russia?

    This was like a provocation, I think.


    You should learn from Asda, which are owned by Wal-Mart, which is an American company.

    Also,  (unilke Asda, Tesco, etc), the self service tills in this shop.


    (Sainsbury’s Rice Lane).


    They are aqwardly placed.


    The carrier-bags are placed to far away from the custommers, I think.

    I think your better at own brand tinned food, than Asda.


    But you just forget my complaints about your noodles, (own brand), which tastes like dish-washing-water, I think.


    (Something like this).


    In your last e-mail.

    There’s no excuse for ignorance, a saying, (here in the UK), says.


    But I don’t think you’ve heard that saying.

    So I want to escalate all the complaints I’ve sent you, please.


    Also, your mashed potatoes, smell bad, which isn’t the case, with Asda’s own-label mashed potatoes.

    And Aldi are better at chicken-steaks, I think.

    Also, you don’t have the chicken-nuggets, (own label), which costs around 70 pence, that Tesco and Asda have.

    I wanted to please escalate all the complaints I’ve sent you, please.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Thu, Mar 14, 2013 at 12:34 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your reply and further comments. I am sorry you are unhappy with the quality of some of our products.

    We strive to provide our customers with great quality products at all times.  I understand this has not been your experience and I have therefore, logged your comments on to our internal system and shared them with the relevant departments.

    We now consider this matter to be closed and will be having no further correspondence in regards to these matters.

    Kind regards

    Jamie Morris | Senior Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 13.03.2013 02:57:04 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040] [SR 1-284817165] [SR 1-284934883] [SR 1-285127521]

    Hi,

    also, at Christmas, your quite old femal staff with blonde hair.


    In the check-out.


    (I bought so much food for Christmas that I used a trolley and went to the manual check-out).


    She had to have antennas on her, since it was Christmas, it seemed.

    She was almost crying, from this ridiculus costume, it seemed to me.


    It reminded me of when I worked as an assistant manager, at Rimi Bjørndal, in Norway, from 1996 to 1998.


    The Store Manager Kristian Kvehaugen said the check-out-staff had to wear santa-caps.

    But the Marocco-girl, in the check-out, took her red santa head-cap of all the time.

    But your staff didn’t do this.

    So it was a bit like a shop from Mars, last Christmas, I think.

    Also your chicken-steaks, for £1.15, doesn’t taste that delicous, I think.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Mar 13, 2013 at 1:35 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Thanks for your email.  We appreciate you taking the time to get in touch as your feedback is important to us.

    We want to ensure you receive great service, so we need to investigate your query a little further.  We’ll be back in touch as soon as possible.  

    Thanks for your patience.

    The Customer Service Team

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd.

    0800 636 262

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com

    Sent: 13.03.2013 01:34:45 PM
    To: customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk
    Subject: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040] [SR 1-284817165] [SR 1-284934883] [SR 1-285127521]

    Hi,

    is your head-office in Moscow or something?

    Your reply just look like a mess to me.

    Those higher managers, (or what they were), were definetly just standing around.


    I know what I saw, I’m an experienced retail-manager, who has worked for almost a lifetime in retail.


    You just invent a reply, it seems to me.


    I have no confidence in you due to this.

    These people weren’t even in uniform/work-clothes.


    Even if that isn’t isn’t reflected in your reply, I think.

    Also, Sainsbury’s low-priced noodles, doesn’t taste good.


    And Sainsbury’s low-priced potato-mash smells bad, I think.

    (I tried it last week-end, but I just threw it, due to the smell, I have to admit).

    Good luck with the Moscowits, Marsians and Gremlins.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Mar 13, 2013 at 12:33 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your further email.

    As detailed in my response of 2 March, your comments have been escalated to me as Senior Manager within Careline.  

    In this reply I detailed our final response to the incident in out Rice Lane store on 14 February relating to the inability to process your card payment.  Equally this was addressed in my colleague Katrina Dicks reply on 4 March.

    Similarly in my reply of 2 March I detailed the reason our self scan checkouts where not functioning on your visit to the store. Although it may have appeared my colleagues in store were simply standing around, I assure you this was not the case.

    The extensive detail provided in each of these responses, and those previously sent by my team, provide our final answer on these points. I hope you can use the information provided and I have explained actions of my colleagues in store.

     

    Kind regards

    Stacey Canon | Senior Careline Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT

    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262
    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 08.03.2013 03:42:07 AM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040] [SR 1-284817165] [SR 1-284934883]

    Hi,

    I’ve sent to your college, Katarina Dick, about this, earlier this week.

    (And asked her to escalate).


    So this is being dealt with already, I think I have to say.


    Regards,


    Erik Ribsskog

    PS.


    Here is more about this:

    Hi,

    ok, I think it’s strange that all your machines doesn’t seem to work.

    It was also a problem with your bank-terminal, at this shop, the week before, (I think it was).

    (Like I have discussed with your college Ajay Chand, like one can see, in one of the forwarded e-mails, with this e-mail).

    A bank-terminal that refuses to let people pay by card, when they have money, on their account.

    That must be pretty rear, I think.

    And that this store also have a group of six self-service tills, that doesn’t work, the next week.

    (Which I haven’t seen in any other store.

    And these tills have been around since 2005, at least, I remember.

    Because I saw them that year, at a big Sainsbury’s in Kensington, in London, where I lived for a couple of weeks, that year).

    So this seems very strange to me.

    It’s like an invasion of Gremlins, I think.

    And how about the group of higher managers, which were standing in between the two groups of self-service tills, on the mentioned Wednesday, (the ones who were monitoring me and the other custommers), do you have an explanation for this?

    Have you had problems with an invasion from Mars?

    I think it must have been something like this, since there has been so much strange ‘stuff’ going on in your store.

    Due to that there have been many problems, I would have wanted to escalate about this, please.

    It has been so much problems with the food-industry lately, (with the horse-meat-scandal etc), so I think this should be on a higher level in your organisation.

    It’s a problem with the whole industry, a lefleat I saw today at Tesco says.

    So due to this I want to escalate, please.

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Mar 6, 2013 at 2:51 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thanks for your email and the further information you provided.  I’m sorry to learn you’re unhappy with our response.

    As advised in our previous emails, if a card if declined in store we’re unable to establish the reason for this.  The instruction to decline the card comes direct from the card provider.  As I’m sure you can appreciate, we need to act on such requests.  

    The only way to resolve this is to contact your card provider.  They’ll be able to carry out a full investigation and establish the reason the card was declined.  Unfortunately, we’re unable to do this on your behalf.  

    Your card provider wouldn’t be able to provide us with any of this information.  This would constitute a breach of the Data Protection Act.  Your card provider will only be able to discuss this with you.  I’m sorry we’re not able to assist you further.  

    We appreciate you’ve taken the time to contact us again and hope you’re able to get this resolved soon.

    Kind regards

    Pamela Scott | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 05.03.2013 12:53:19 AM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040] [SR 1-284817165]

    Hi,

    I’ve sent about this complaint earlier today, (Monday):

    Erik Ribsskog

    PS.


    Here is more about this:

    Hi,

    ok, I think it’s strange that all your machines doesn’t seem to work.


    It was also a problem with your bank-terminal, at this shop, the week before, (I think it was).



    (Like I have discussed with your college Ajay Chand, like one can see, in one of the forwarded e-mails, with this e-mail).

    A bank-terminal that refuses to let people pay by card, when they have money, on their account.

    That must be pretty rear, I think.

    And that this store also have a group of six self-service tills, that doesn’t work, the next week.


    (Which I haven’t seen in any other store.


    And these tills have been around since 2005, at least, I remember.


    Because I saw them that year, at a big Sainsbury’s in Kensington, in London, where I lived for a couple of weeks, that year).

    So this seems very strange to me.


    It’s like an invasion of Gremlins, I think.


    And how about the group of higher managers, which were standing in between the two groups of self-service tills, on the mentioned Wednesday, (the ones who were monitoring me and the other custommers), do you have an explanation for this?



    Have you had problems with an invasion from Mars?

    I think it must have been something like this, since there has been so much strange ‘stuff’ going on in your store.


    Due to that there have been many problems, I would have wanted to escalate about this, please.

    It has been so much problems with the food-industry lately, (with the horse-meat-scandal etc), so I think this should be on a higher level in your organisation.

    It’s a problem with the whole industry, a lefleat I saw today at Tesco says.

    So due to this I want to escalate, please.


    Erik Ribsskog



    On Mon, Mar 4, 2013 at 10:58 AM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your email reply.  I am sorry my colleagues have been unable to resolve this matter to your satisfaction.  I can appreciate your frustration as you have provided us with several pieces of information about your transaction.

    I can confirm that the information my colleague Jamie and Stacey provided you is correct.  When a customer’s payment card is declined at our checkouts we are unable to identify why this decision was made.  The instruction to refuse payment comes from the card provider.

    I know you understand there is also a merchant who facilitates these requests on behalf of your card provider.  I appreciate you experience of retail in Norway but unfortunately the process you outline when incidents like this occur is not mirrored in our stores.

    When a card is declined in store we are unable to establish the reason. There can be several factors which can cause this, for example the merchant provider may be down.  We would request you follow the guidance offered by my colleagues and contact your card provider for further information.
    We appreciate you taking the time to come back to us and hope the information we have provided is useful.

    Kind regards

    Katrina Dick | Senior Customer Manager
    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262
    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 02.03.2013 05:28:17 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040]

    Hi,

    like I wrote in the first e-mail about this problem.

    If it was a problem with the connection, then the bank-terminals in Norway, more than twenty years ago, wrote a receipt, which was almost like a cheque, for the custommer to sign.


    The amount would then take a bit longer time, (a couple of days, I think we told the custommers), to be withdrawn, from the custommers’ bank-accounts.

    So is the UK more than 20 years behind Norway, when it comes to this?

    This doesn’t seem likely, to me.

    I wonder if there have been some ‘Gremlins’ here, messing with my account.


    I think it’s poor custommer-service, that you don’t investigate what has happened here.


    I have also gone to business-school, and learned that the custommer is always right.

    I think the UK is poor on custommer-service.


    You should learn from the USA, I think.

    It doesn’t seem you have a custommer-service attitude, (towards custommers), here in the UK.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Sat, Mar 2, 2013 at 3:40 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your further email.  I am sorry my colleagues have been unable to resolve this matter to your satisfaction.  I can appreciate your frustration as you have provided us with several pieces of information about your transaction. As requested your correspondence has been escalated to me.

    Our customers experience is important to us.  We expect our customers to have the best service possible and it is disappointing to us that this has not been your experience.

    As my colleagues have explained, when a customer’s payment card is declined at our checkouts we are unable to identify why this decision was made.  The instruction to refuse payment comes from the card provider.

    I know you understand there is also a merchant who facilitates these requests on behalf of your card provider.  I appreciate you experience of retail in Norway but unfortunately the process you outline when incidents like this occur is not mirrored in our stores.

    As you mention your card was then accepted on the second attempt, it may be there was a temporary error with the connection from your card supplier. To this end we would request you follow the guidance offered by my colleagues and contact your card provider for further information.

    I appreciate this was not the answer you were hoping for but I must stress that my colleagues have guided you correctly through all stages of your contact with us.  I hope you can speak with you banking group and source the answer you require.

    I appreciate you taking the time to get in touch.

     

    Kind regards

    Stacey Cannon | Careline Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 01.03.2013 04:50:16 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826]

    Hi,

    thank you for your e-mail!

    I think that since this was something that happened, in your store, then you have a responsibility, to help finding out what has happened.


    I think it’s poor custommer-support, that I have to go in the bank, and ask them, what has happened.


    I’ve sent you the recepts and all, so this is something you could find out, I think.

    You are just being lazy here, it seems to me.


    Dear I ask to get this escalated again?

    Regards,


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Fri, Mar 1, 2013 at 3:06 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your further email.  I am sorry you are unhappy with my colleagues’ previous responses.

    I have looked into this matter and I can confirm that the information my colleagues’ gave you is correct.  When a card is declined in store we are unable to establish the reason.  There can be several factors which can cause this, for example the merchant provider may be down.

    As my colleagues have advised, the only way to establish what went wrong would be to contact your card provider directly as we would not be able to offer any further assistance with this matter.

    I hope this information is useful to you and we look forward to seeing you in store again soon.

    Kind regards

    Jamie Morris | Senior Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 28.02.2013 12:27:46 AM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091]

    Hi,

    I’ve worked as a store manager myself in Norway.


    And if I had gotten a complaint like that, I would have called the company which runs the bank-terminals, and asked them what the problem was.

    So this wasn’t good custommer-support, I think.


    Can I escalate this to your line-manager, please?

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Feb 27, 2013 at 9:38 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thanks for your email and further comments relating to your recent enquiry.

    I’ve contacted the Rice lane store and discussed this with Nicola Edwards, the Customer Services Desk.  She’s asked me to send her apologies and was disappointed to hear of your experience.  She’s advised when a card is declined in store we aren’t able to establish the reason.  There can be several factors which can cause this for example the merchant provider may be down.

    I appreciate the time you have taken to contact us and I hope this information is helpful.

    Kind regards

    Ajay Chand | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 23.02.2013 04:27:35 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844]

    Hi,

    thank you for your e-mail!

    I don’t think it could have been the card-provider, that the problem was with.


    Because like one can see, on the recepits, that I attach copies of.


    The card worked again, a minute after if first had been refused.

    So it was just a temporarely problem, it seems.


    But like I wrote to you earlier, I’ve worked full time, as a cashier, for almost a year, at OBS Triaden, in Norway.

    And this was in 1990/91.


    But we had bank-terminals, in every other till.

    And even 20 years ago, this didn’t happen.


    If the bank terminals were off-line, then the custommer was told to sign a recepit, and this was then like a cheque, more or less.


    So I think it’s to bad, that this worked in Norway, 20 years ago.


    But it doesn’t work in the UK, today.

    I know there is a company, in-between you and the banks.

    (I know, because I’ve also worked as a retail manager in Norway, for ten years, in the Rimi-chain, owned by ICA).

    So I think it could be some ‘Gremlins’ there perhaps.

    This company was called ‘Bank Accept’, (or something), in Norway.

    You probably have an equivalent, (to Bank Accept), here in the UK.


    So I send again about this.


    Perhaps you could escalate this to your line-manager.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Sat, Feb 23, 2013 at 4:15 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Erik Ribsskog

    Thanks for your email.  I’m sorry your visa card payment was refused at our Rice Lane store on your recent visit.  I understand your disappointment as there was enough money in your bank.

    We are not aware of any faults with our card machines at the minute.  I can only recommend that you contact your card provider.

    We appreciate you taking the time to get in touch and make us aware of this and hope to see you in store soon.

    Kind regards

    Daniel Carr | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 19.02.2013 03:24:16 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Shopping instore

    The following comments have been made:
    Full Name: Erik Ribsskog
    Email: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Telephone:
    Subject: Complaint
    User’s Comments: I was in your supermarket, in Rice Lane, in Liverpool, on Saturday, (14/2).
    My visa card payment was first refused, even if there was enough money, on the account.
    I haven’t experienced this before.
    (Even if I’ve worked for almost a lifetime, in retail, in Norway).
    Do you need the recepit-number etc., to investigate this?
    Regards,
    Erik Ribsskog
    Address:
    Nectar Card Number:
    Order/Reference Number:
    Delivery Date:
    QUALITY
    Store Name:
    Purchase Date:
    Product Name and/or barcode number:
    Other codes (batch; be; supplier):
    AVAILABILITY
    Product Name and/or barcode number:
    Store Name:
    Incident Date:
    GENERAL INFORMATION
    Store Name:
    Purchase Date:
    Product Name and/or barcode number:
    Other codes(batch; bbe; supplier):
    Reference: CTU-1361287453578-393

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  • Jeg sendte en ny e-post til Sainsbury’s


    Gmail – Update/Fwd: Re: Re: [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-285513533] [SR 1-285724516]

    Gmail


    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>



    Update/Fwd: Re: Re: [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-285513533] [SR 1-285724516]



    Erik Ribsskog

    <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Thu, Mar 21, 2013 at 7:12 PM

    To:
    customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk

    Hi,

    I know I’ve asked you to escalate.
    But I was in your shop in Rice Lane again now, and I thought it was a bit intimidating, that your big African security-guard, and three Sainsbury-staff, (it seemed), were standing in a group, in the middle of the shop, without saying anything, (but just observing).


    I’ve seen aomething similar at Tesco.

    (The Superstore in Liverpool One).

    A group of managers in suits, motivate some other staff, outside of the fresh-food-department.

    But your managers didn’t say anything.


    And I went back to buy a bottle of water, that was also on my shopping-list, and then these people didn’t stand around in the shop, (without doing anything), any longer.

    This seemed almost militant, to me, and a bit intimidating, really.

    It reminded me about an episode at Aldi, earlier this week.

    They also had an African security-guard, and two or three other staff standing that close to me, discussing that they were sold out of 0.5 litre water-bottles.


    You also had a young ‘retard’ and his two parents there.

    Like it was also at Aldi, that mentioned day, a bit older retard, in one of their slow moving queues.

    And when I went out of the shop the second time, a Sainsbury-woman started screaming to a collegue, to buy her water.

    (When I was just purchasing a water-bottle, in the self-service check-outs).

    Your shop is almost a bit weird, I think.

    Have you read about the Aldi-episode, on my blog?

    Are you doing some kind of wicka-stuff, I’m wondering.

    Are you monitoring me in your shop?

    There has also been a similar episode, where you were monitoring the customers, (like I’ve complained about).


    Are you monitoring the custommers?
    And why only when I’m in the shop, it seems.

    This seems very odd to me.

    Please escalate this complaints with my other complaints, (like I wrote to you, earlier today).

    Erik Ribsskog

    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>

    Date: Thu, Mar 21, 2013 at 12:55 PM
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-285513533] [SR 1-285724516]
    To: customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk

    Hi,

    I understand that this was escalated to you.

    But I’ve asked to please get this escalated again.
    I can’t see that you’ve done this.

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Mar 20, 2013 at 10:33 AM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:
    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thanks for your email.  I’m sorry you’re unhappy with our previous responses.  I can confirm that I’m a senior customer manager and this has been escalated to myself.

    We want to make our customers shopping trips as convenient as possible and we introduced our self checkouts as an efficient and speedy alternative to manned checkouts.  However, we recognise that they are not ideal for all our customers and we aim to provide a choice, which includes opening more manned checkouts for our customers who prefer them.  You certainly should not feel pressured into using these tills.


    We have a TRY promise were if you’re unhappy with any of our own brand products, you can get a full refund by taking the packaging and receipt to the customer service desk in any store.  If you could reply with more information on the chicken steaks you’re referring to, I can investigate this further.  Ideally if you have any information on the packaging, I can log this with our buyers.

    I’ve called our Rice Lane store and spoken to my colleague, Kim Tingsley, the Customer Service Supervisor.  Kim advised that there was a problem with one of the bank terminals in the store.  Although the banks aren’t managed by the store, this was reported immediately and has since been fixed.  I appreciate you’d like more information on this but as the banks are managed externally, we’re unable to provide any more information.

    Kim wasn’t aware of any problems with the self service checkouts.  If you could reply confirming which date you entered the store and what was wrong with the tills and also more information on the antennas you mentioned, I can investigate this further with the store.  I appreciate these issues have been going on for some time.  If you could reply with your contact number, we’d be happy to call you in order to resolve these for you.

    We’re grateful that you’ve taken the time to contact us and look forward to your response.

    Kind regards

    Jack Barr | Senior Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 18.03.2013 03:32:31 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-285513533]

    Hi,

    ok, and how about the awkward self-service-tills?

    Have you gotten a lot of complaints about them?

    And the antennas for Christmas.


    Am I the only one who have complained?

    And the chicken-steaks aren’t that delicous, I think.

    Has this really been escalated now, by the way?

    How can you explain two ‘Gremlin-attacks’ in a few days, in this shop?

    (The problem with the bank-terminals and the six self-service tills).


    I think it’s bad custommer support that you don’t explain to me, what was wrong, with the bank-terminal.


    One single phone-call.

    How hard can this be?

    This seems very strange to me.


    It’s like you don’t really try, I think.

    I’ve asked to escalate this.


    I can’t see that that has really happened.


    So I try again.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Mon, Mar 18, 2013 at 3:11 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Erik Ribsskog

    Thanks for your email.  I’m sorry that you were unhappy with your trip to our Rice Lane store.  I can understand your disappointment as you saw some of the behaviour as a “provocation”.

    It is never our intent for our customers to feel awkward in store, we wish for our customers to enjoy their shopping experience.  Our security guards patrol for the safety of all our customers and are not there to provoke anybody.  I apologise that a colleague moved your basket without asking. I have passed your comments onto management who appreciate all customer feedback.

    We’re grateful to you for taking the time to contact us and we look forward to seeing you again shortly.

    Kind regards

    Careline Hot Topic Queue | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 14.03.2013 04:29:58 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: [SR 1-284217844]

    Hi,

    I’m just back, after shopping at Farmfoods and Sainsbury’s.

    At Sainsbury’s a Securitas-guard patroled right in front of me, when I walked in to the shop.


    I thought that was almost like a provocation.

    (This was your Rice Lane shop, as usual).

    Also, in the self-service till, a Sainsbury-woman, (quite big), in her 40’s, suddently started lifting on my basket, to get to a basket, which was underneath mine.

    (From the custommer before me).


    I’ve seen at Asda.


    At the self-service tills there.


    That a sing says: ‘Always explain the intervention’.


    Your staff didn’t do this.


    She made me almost get a shock, I think I have to say.


    This was like something that could only have happened in Russia.


    I brought my own basket back to the entrance-area, (around where the Security-guard was).

    And it was no shortage of baskets there.


    So I think I have to call this a basket-case.


    Why do your staff act like they’re trained in Russia?

    This was like a provocation, I think.


    You should learn from Asda, which are owned by Wal-Mart, which is an American company.

    Also,  (unilke Asda, Tesco, etc), the self service tills in this shop.


    (Sainsbury’s Rice Lane).


    They are aqwardly placed.


    The carrier-bags are placed to far away from the custommers, I think.

    I think your better at own brand tinned food, than Asda.


    But you just forget my complaints about your noodles, (own brand), which tastes like dish-washing-water, I think.


    (Something like this).


    In your last e-mail.

    There’s no excuse for ignorance, a saying, (here in the UK), says.


    But I don’t think you’ve heard that saying.

    So I want to escalate all the complaints I’ve sent you, please.


    Also, your mashed potatoes, smell bad, which isn’t the case, with Asda’s own-label mashed potatoes.

    And Aldi are better at chicken-steaks, I think.

    Also, you don’t have the chicken-nuggets, (own label), which costs around 70 pence, that Tesco and Asda have.

    I wanted to please escalate all the complaints I’ve sent you, please.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Thu, Mar 14, 2013 at 12:34 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your reply and further comments. I am sorry you are unhappy with the quality of some of our products.

    We strive to provide our customers with great quality products at all times.  I understand this has not been your experience and I have therefore, logged your comments on to our internal system and shared them with the relevant departments.

    We now consider this matter to be closed and will be having no further correspondence in regards to these matters.

    Kind regards

    Jamie Morris | Senior Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 13.03.2013 02:57:04 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040] [SR 1-284817165] [SR 1-284934883] [SR 1-285127521]

    Hi,

    also, at Christmas, your quite old femal staff with blonde hair.


    In the check-out.


    (I bought so much food for Christmas that I used a trolley and went to the manual check-out).


    She had to have antennas on her, since it was Christmas, it seemed.

    She was almost crying, from this ridiculus costume, it seemed to me.


    It reminded me of when I worked as an assistant manager, at Rimi Bjørndal, in Norway, from 1996 to 1998.


    The Store Manager Kristian Kvehaugen said the check-out-staff had to wear santa-caps.

    But the Marocco-girl, in the check-out, took her red santa head-cap of all the time.

    But your staff didn’t do this.

    So it was a bit like a shop from Mars, last Christmas, I think.

    Also your chicken-steaks, for £1.15, doesn’t taste that delicous, I think.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Mar 13, 2013 at 1:35 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Thanks for your email.  We appreciate you taking the time to get in touch as your feedback is important to us.

    We want to ensure you receive great service, so we need to investigate your query a little further.  We’ll be back in touch as soon as possible.  

    Thanks for your patience.

    The Customer Service Team

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd.

    0800 636 262

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com

    Sent: 13.03.2013 01:34:45 PM
    To: customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk
    Subject: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040] [SR 1-284817165] [SR 1-284934883] [SR 1-285127521]

    Hi,

    is your head-office in Moscow or something?

    Your reply just look like a mess to me.

    Those higher managers, (or what they were), were definetly just standing around.


    I know what I saw, I’m an experienced retail-manager, who has worked for almost a lifetime in retail.


    You just invent a reply, it seems to me.


    I have no confidence in you due to this.

    These people weren’t even in uniform/work-clothes.


    Even if that isn’t isn’t reflected in your reply, I think.

    Also, Sainsbury’s low-priced noodles, doesn’t taste good.


    And Sainsbury’s low-priced potato-mash smells bad, I think.

    (I tried it last week-end, but I just threw it, due to the smell, I have to admit).

    Good luck with the Moscowits, Marsians and Gremlins.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Mar 13, 2013 at 12:33 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your further email.

    As detailed in my response of 2 March, your comments have been escalated to me as Senior Manager within Careline.  

    In this reply I detailed our final response to the incident in out Rice Lane store on 14 February relating to the inability to process your card payment.  Equally this was addressed in my colleague Katrina Dicks reply on 4 March.

    Similarly in my reply of 2 March I detailed the reason our self scan checkouts where not functioning on your visit to the store. Although it may have appeared my colleagues in store were simply standing around, I assure you this was not the case.

    The extensive detail provided in each of these responses, and those previously sent by my team, provide our final answer on these points. I hope you can use the information provided and I have explained actions of my colleagues in store.

     

    Kind regards

    Stacey Canon | Senior Careline Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT

    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262
    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 08.03.2013 03:42:07 AM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040] [SR 1-284817165] [SR 1-284934883]

    Hi,

    I’ve sent to your college, Katarina Dick, about this, earlier this week.

    (And asked her to escalate).


    So this is being dealt with already, I think I have to say.


    Regards,


    Erik Ribsskog

    PS.


    Here is more about this:

    Hi,

    ok, I think it’s strange that all your machines doesn’t seem to work.

    It was also a problem with your bank-terminal, at this shop, the week before, (I think it was).

    (Like I have discussed with your college Ajay Chand, like one can see, in one of the forwarded e-mails, with this e-mail).

    A bank-terminal that refuses to let people pay by card, when they have money, on their account.

    That must be pretty rear, I think.

    And that this store also have a group of six self-service tills, that doesn’t work, the next week.

    (Which I haven’t seen in any other store.

    And these tills have been around since 2005, at least, I remember.

    Because I saw them that year, at a big Sainsbury’s in Kensington, in London, where I lived for a couple of weeks, that year).

    So this seems very strange to me.

    It’s like an invasion of Gremlins, I think.

    And how about the group of higher managers, which were standing in between the two groups of self-service tills, on the mentioned Wednesday, (the ones who were monitoring me and the other custommers), do you have an explanation for this?

    Have you had problems with an invasion from Mars?

    I think it must have been something like this, since there has been so much strange ‘stuff’ going on in your store.

    Due to that there have been many problems, I would have wanted to escalate about this, please.

    It has been so much problems with the food-industry lately, (with the horse-meat-scandal etc), so I think this should be on a higher level in your organisation.

    It’s a problem with the whole industry, a lefleat I saw today at Tesco says.

    So due to this I want to escalate, please.

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Mar 6, 2013 at 2:51 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thanks for your email and the further information you provided.  I’m sorry to learn you’re unhappy with our response.

    As advised in our previous emails, if a card if declined in store we’re unable to establish the reason for this.  The instruction to decline the card comes direct from the card provider.  As I’m sure you can appreciate, we need to act on such requests.  

    The only way to resolve this is to contact your card provider.  They’ll be able to carry out a full investigation and establish the reason the card was declined.  Unfortunately, we’re unable to do this on your behalf.  

    Your card provider wouldn’t be able to provide us with any of this information.  This would constitute a breach of the Data Protection Act.  Your card provider will only be able to discuss this with you.  I’m sorry we’re not able to assist you further.  

    We appreciate you’ve taken the time to contact us again and hope you’re able to get this resolved soon.

    Kind regards

    Pamela Scott | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 05.03.2013 12:53:19 AM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040] [SR 1-284817165]

    Hi,

    I’ve sent about this complaint earlier today, (Monday):

    Erik Ribsskog

    PS.


    Here is more about this:

    Hi,

    ok, I think it’s strange that all your machines doesn’t seem to work.


    It was also a problem with your bank-terminal, at this shop, the week before, (I think it was).



    (Like I have discussed with your college Ajay Chand, like one can see, in one of the forwarded e-mails, with this e-mail).

    A bank-terminal that refuses to let people pay by card, when they have money, on their account.

    That must be pretty rear, I think.

    And that this store also have a group of six self-service tills, that doesn’t work, the next week.


    (Which I haven’t seen in any other store.


    And these tills have been around since 2005, at least, I remember.


    Because I saw them that year, at a big Sainsbury’s in Kensington, in London, where I lived for a couple of weeks, that year).

    So this seems very strange to me.


    It’s like an invasion of Gremlins, I think.


    And how about the group of higher managers, which were standing in between the two groups of self-service tills, on the mentioned Wednesday, (the ones who were monitoring me and the other custommers), do you have an explanation for this?



    Have you had problems with an invasion from Mars?

    I think it must have been something like this, since there has been so much strange ‘stuff’ going on in your store.


    Due to that there have been many problems, I would have wanted to escalate about this, please.

    It has been so much problems with the food-industry lately, (with the horse-meat-scandal etc), so I think this should be on a higher level in your organisation.

    It’s a problem with the whole industry, a lefleat I saw today at Tesco says.

    So due to this I want to escalate, please.


    Erik Ribsskog



    On Mon, Mar 4, 2013 at 10:58 AM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your email reply.  I am sorry my colleagues have been unable to resolve this matter to your satisfaction.  I can appreciate your frustration as you have provided us with several pieces of information about your transaction.

    I can confirm that the information my colleague Jamie and Stacey provided you is correct.  When a customer’s payment card is declined at our checkouts we are unable to identify why this decision was made.  The instruction to refuse payment comes from the card provider.

    I know you understand there is also a merchant who facilitates these requests on behalf of your card provider.  I appreciate you experience of retail in Norway but unfortunately the process you outline when incidents like this occur is not mirrored in our stores.

    When a card is declined in store we are unable to establish the reason. There can be several factors which can cause this, for example the merchant provider may be down.  We would request you follow the guidance offered by my colleagues and contact your card provider for further information.
    We appreciate you taking the time to come back to us and hope the information we have provided is useful.

    Kind regards

    Katrina Dick | Senior Customer Manager
    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262
    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 02.03.2013 05:28:17 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826] [SR 1-284725040]

    Hi,

    like I wrote in the first e-mail about this problem.

    If it was a problem with the connection, then the bank-terminals in Norway, more than twenty years ago, wrote a receipt, which was almost like a cheque, for the custommer to sign.


    The amount would then take a bit longer time, (a couple of days, I think we told the custommers), to be withdrawn, from the custommers’ bank-accounts.

    So is the UK more than 20 years behind Norway, when it comes to this?

    This doesn’t seem likely, to me.

    I wonder if there have been some ‘Gremlins’ here, messing with my account.


    I think it’s poor custommer-service, that you don’t investigate what has happened here.


    I have also gone to business-school, and learned that the custommer is always right.

    I think the UK is poor on custommer-service.


    You should learn from the USA, I think.

    It doesn’t seem you have a custommer-service attitude, (towards custommers), here in the UK.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Sat, Mar 2, 2013 at 3:40 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your further email.  I am sorry my colleagues have been unable to resolve this matter to your satisfaction.  I can appreciate your frustration as you have provided us with several pieces of information about your transaction. As requested your correspondence has been escalated to me.

    Our customers experience is important to us.  We expect our customers to have the best service possible and it is disappointing to us that this has not been your experience.

    As my colleagues have explained, when a customer’s payment card is declined at our checkouts we are unable to identify why this decision was made.  The instruction to refuse payment comes from the card provider.

    I know you understand there is also a merchant who facilitates these requests on behalf of your card provider.  I appreciate you experience of retail in Norway but unfortunately the process you outline when incidents like this occur is not mirrored in our stores.

    As you mention your card was then accepted on the second attempt, it may be there was a temporary error with the connection from your card supplier. To this end we would request you follow the guidance offered by my colleagues and contact your card provider for further information.

    I appreciate this was not the answer you were hoping for but I must stress that my colleagues have guided you correctly through all stages of your contact with us.  I hope you can speak with you banking group and source the answer you require.

    I appreciate you taking the time to get in touch.

     

    Kind regards

    Stacey Cannon | Careline Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 01.03.2013 04:50:16 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091] [SR 1-284658826]

    Hi,

    thank you for your e-mail!

    I think that since this was something that happened, in your store, then you have a responsibility, to help finding out what has happened.


    I think it’s poor custommer-support, that I have to go in the bank, and ask them, what has happened.


    I’ve sent you the recepts and all, so this is something you could find out, I think.

    You are just being lazy here, it seems to me.


    Dear I ask to get this escalated again?

    Regards,


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Fri, Mar 1, 2013 at 3:06 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your further email.  I am sorry you are unhappy with my colleagues’ previous responses.

    I have looked into this matter and I can confirm that the information my colleagues’ gave you is correct.  When a card is declined in store we are unable to establish the reason.  There can be several factors which can cause this, for example the merchant provider may be down.

    As my colleagues have advised, the only way to establish what went wrong would be to contact your card provider directly as we would not be able to offer any further assistance with this matter.

    I hope this information is useful to you and we look forward to seeing you in store again soon.

    Kind regards

    Jamie Morris | Senior Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 28.02.2013 12:27:46 AM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844] [SR 1-284395091]

    Hi,

    I’ve worked as a store manager myself in Norway.


    And if I had gotten a complaint like that, I would have called the company which runs the bank-terminals, and asked them what the problem was.

    So this wasn’t good custommer-support, I think.


    Can I escalate this to your line-manager, please?

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Feb 27, 2013 at 9:38 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thanks for your email and further comments relating to your recent enquiry.

    I’ve contacted the Rice lane store and discussed this with Nicola Edwards, the Customer Services Desk.  She’s asked me to send her apologies and was disappointed to hear of your experience.  She’s advised when a card is declined in store we aren’t able to establish the reason.  There can be several factors which can cause this for example the merchant provider may be down.

    I appreciate the time you have taken to contact us and I hope this information is helpful.

    Kind regards

    Ajay Chand | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 23.02.2013 04:27:35 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Re: Shopping instore [SR 1-284217844]

    Hi,

    thank you for your e-mail!

    I don’t think it could have been the card-provider, that the problem was with.


    Because like one can see, on the recepits, that I attach copies of.


    The card worked again, a minute after if first had been refused.

    So it was just a temporarely problem, it seems.


    But like I wrote to you earlier, I’ve worked full time, as a cashier, for almost a year, at OBS Triaden, in Norway.

    And this was in 1990/91.


    But we had bank-terminals, in every other till.

    And even 20 years ago, this didn’t happen.


    If the bank terminals were off-line, then the custommer was told to sign a recepit, and this was then like a cheque, more or less.


    So I think it’s to bad, that this worked in Norway, 20 years ago.


    But it doesn’t work in the UK, today.

    I know there is a company, in-between you and the banks.

    (I know, because I’ve also worked as a retail manager in Norway, for ten years, in the Rimi-chain, owned by ICA).

    So I think it could be some ‘Gremlins’ there perhaps.

    This company was called ‘Bank Accept’, (or something), in Norway.

    You probably have an equivalent, (to Bank Accept), here in the UK.


    So I send again about this.


    Perhaps you could escalate this to your line-manager.


    Erik Ribsskog

    On Sat, Feb 23, 2013 at 4:15 PM, <customerservice@sainsburys.co.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Erik Ribsskog

    Thanks for your email.  I’m sorry your visa card payment was refused at our Rice Lane store on your recent visit.  I understand your disappointment as there was enough money in your bank.

    We are not aware of any faults with our card machines at the minute.  I can only recommend that you contact your card provider.

    We appreciate you taking the time to get in touch and make us aware of this and hope to see you in store soon.

    Kind regards

    Daniel Carr | Customer Manager

    Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd | 33 Holborn, London | EC1N 2HT
    customer.service@sainsburys.co.uk | 0800 636 262

    twitter.com/sainsburys | facebook.com/sainsburys

    [THREAD ID:1-4P5SS0]

    —–Original Message—–
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Sent: 19.02.2013 03:24:16 PM
    To: “Customer.Service” <Customer.Service@sainsburys.co.uk>
    Subject: Shopping instore

    The following comments have been made:
    Full Name: Erik Ribsskog
    Email: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Telephone:
    Subject: Complaint
    User’s Comments: I was in your supermarket, in Rice Lane, in Liverpool, on Saturday, (14/2).
    My visa card payment was first refused, even if there was enough money, on the account.
    I haven’t experienced this before.
    (Even if I’ve worked for almost a lifetime, in retail, in Norway).
    Do you need the recepit-number etc., to investigate this?
    Regards,
    Erik Ribsskog
    Address:
    Nectar Card Number:
    Order/Reference Number:
    Delivery Date:
    QUALITY
    Store Name:
    Purchase Date:
    Product Name and/or barcode number:
    Other codes (batch; be; supplier):
    AVAILABILITY
    Product Name and/or barcode number:
    Store Name:
    Incident Date:
    GENERAL INFORMATION
    Store Name:
    Purchase Date:
    Product Name and/or barcode number:
    Other codes(batch; bbe; supplier):
    Reference: CTU-1361287453578-393

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