Hi CravingCakes. Can you please involve me in any resolution as well? She owes me several hundred dollars in shops conducted over the last few months. I would be more than happy to participate in taking this to small claims court or more.
@sandyf wrote:
My son's gym in Boston has reportedly shut it's doors temporarily and fired all it's employees. They do not have anyone answering the phone or emails so no one can cancel their subscription to the gym or even suspend it and they are continuing to charge credit cards even tho no one can go there. It is part of a larger company that has many gyms including a high end one in New York city that is doing the same thing. I read one article that said they had recently heard from the owner that they MAY upgrade people's memberships until the end of the year to make up for the lost months they had to pay for. Memberships cost between $30 and $100 a month. I doubt my son would want to pay for how ever many months they are closed and get to be a $100 member instead of a $30 member for a few months instead of getting his time extended or not being charged at all.
@panama18 wrote:
If I was in that situation I would lock the credit card they were charging.
@sandyf wrote:
My son's gym in Boston has reportedly shut it's doors temporarily and fired all it's employees.
@anng123 wrote:
Any news on this front?
@anng123 wrote:
The clients seem to be slowly reopening/some never closed during the quarantine..... has anyone gotten payments out of her yet?
@Niner wrote:
@anng123 wrote:
The clients seem to be slowly reopening/some never closed during the quarantine..... has anyone gotten payments out of her yet?
Nope. She told me she is not paying.
@sestrahelena wrote:
How would one know which party or department to write to in a national chain company?
@roflwofl wrote:
@sestrahelena wrote:
How would one know which party or department to write to in a national chain company?
Putting the MSC on notice of a plan to contact the client, as bob did, might motivate the MSC to resolve the issue and contacting the client might not be necessary. Stating the intention to contact the client might be a very good negotiation tool. Of course, that assumes that the MSC still has a contract with the client and still wants to pursue working with the client. Superior has lost several large clients. If I were going to contact the MSC's client, I would start by considering it a complaint. For example, if I were going to contact TGI Fridays {NOTE: this is not a Superior client, merely an example}, I would Google "File a complaint TGI Fridays." Listed is:
Call Customer Care on 1 (800) 374-3297.
Visit Customer Care Contact Form.
Call Headquarters on (972) 662-5400.
Tweet T.G.I. Friday's.
Tweet T.G.I. Friday's.
Watch T.G.I. Friday's.
Follow T.G.I. Friday's.
T.G.I. Friday's Complaintswww.complaintsdepartment.com › tgi-fridays
It would probably not be difficult to contact a national chain company whether it would lead to a successful resolution or not. Best bet might be the negotiation with the MSC.
@anng123 wrote:
Prove this.
@roflwofl wrote:
@anng123 wrote:
Prove this.
I could "prove" that by naming 3 ex-clients of Superior and telling which new MSC now has those clients. Before the Corona put an end to mystery shops, I did shops for 3 ex-Superior clients with other MSCs. BUT ...... I signed ICAs with Superior and with the MSCs that now have the clients so I will not name any of the clients or MSCs. It will have to remain unproven.
@sandyf wrote:
The Asian client in my area was still being shopped by SCS shortly before covid . There were two other clients in my area, one of them also had jobs early this year. The other which was a different Asian food client has been gone for months. But generally I see some clients come and go with any msc. I have no idea if they jumped to another msc or just stopped their ms program.