The lack of customer support is a problem with many of the software-eating-the-world startups, one that I think will hinder wider adoption. When you're automatically charging customers variable prices for services of variable quality that often deal with your safety or personal property, you should probably provide customers with effective recourse.
http://blog.uber.com/2012/03/14/clear-and-straight-forward-s...
^^^ This is a well stated, & concise summary of the main issue.
Back in the fall of 2013 a cab driver charged me $30 in Chicago instead of what the meter said (which was around $8). After this happened, I had contacted Uber support and they merely gave me some automated style response saying there was nothing they could do because the city sets the cab pricing. First off, they treated me like I was an idiot with a response like that. Of course I knew the city set the rates, that wasn't the issue I was contacting them about. Secondly, they completely ignored my problem all together. I wasn't complaining because the price per mile was higher than UberX or something like that. If I had, what they sent would have been a perfect response. But no, I was complaining because the cab driver down right stole money from me, and there was nothing I could do about it. They could clearly see in the receipt that the time traveled, distance, etc. could have no way in hell been worth $30 that I was charged. In fact, it was a cab ride to work so I had plenty of other receipts that showed it was typically around $8-10. So, like OP, my support ticket was marked "solve" and I was duped $20, and never contacted again (even after I replied trying to further explain my problem). It was after this that Uber always left a bad taste in my mouth. It was a straight slap in the face to me (the customer) by Uber.
...But my confusion is case in point that Uber's customer support did not address anything like they should have. If you are right, then they could have explained that to me. And that would also just mean it was clearly a bug in their system that charged me more. And had that been the answer, I should have gotten a refund. But I didn't, so maybe instead of the cab driver cheating me, they were just straight cheating me. Who knows. All I do know is that I was charged $30 for a ride that should have been $8-10, and I never got a real response from their customer support to refund me, help me out, explain what maybe happened, investigate, etc. That's the main problem I wanted to explain.
They are clearly advertising that they will make sure that there are more surge pricing opportunities and this seems to be the result of that kind of attitude.
EDIT: Seems like I'm being downvoted by a bunch of Uber employees, but unfortunately the downvotes won't really accomplish much. I'm not stating any wild opinions. Just facts and reasonable assumptions.
It's interesting how companies try to message differently to different groups, and how a message intended for investors really sounds bad to customers.
http://valleywag.gawker.com/uber-forced-driver-shortage-to-b...
But Uber recruited new drivers for UberX, and then intentionally prevented them from driving on Valentine's day so that surge pricing would come into effect.
If anyone finds it, feel free to post.
Unknown? I think it's pretty fair to say they found you abusing their referral policy [1]. I'm interested in you managed to get 5000 referrals (assuming each referral got you $20)?
[1]: http://support.uber.com/hc/en-us/articles/201830716-How-do-I...
This guy's full of shit if he's claiming he didn't know it was surging until after the receipt came. It's quite literally impossible to order an uber at 2.0x or above and not be painfully aware of the surge.
http://blog.uber.com/2012/03/14/clear-and-straight-forward-s...
I've only used the service a few times so I don't remember if this has changed, but I can't imagine they would have dropped that confirmation.
Luckily, I've had great experiences with Uber. Only once did I give a low star-rating, and they contacted me and adjusted the fare because of it.
As for the user support - I would say it is just excellent. At least here in Russia. Once I had a ride with a driver who forgot to turn on the meter. When I received the receipt, it showed very different route from the route from my office to my home. I marked my experience with two stars and gave a "Wrong route" reason. Next day I got an email from Uber support person, explaining the problem (forgotten meter). The also gave me a rebate in amount of 30% or my ride.
So, I'm not considering them as evil, even despite they ruin gypsy taxi business.
On one hand, I can appreciate that Uber doesn't want to provide a 'service level agreement' when the service providers are third parties (the taxi/car driver).
On the other hand, not helping someone resolve an issue (that is well more than trivial) is worrisome.
Much has been said and promised of Uber (yes, I use it and love it). However, this could well be another example of a company that scales quickly promising a level of customer service that simply can't scale (either operationally or financially). The real question is how many repeat customers Uber has over time. Buying once is nice, buying everyday is what they need.
"I got a coffee. They got the order right; charged me a reasonable amount; served me in an acceptable time. The place wasn't too crowded or noisy, and it was clean. I drank it - it was nice coffee, and then I left. We said a cheery 'goodbye!' as I left."
$357 is completely exorbitant. My longest Uber ride was to the airport. A black car picked me up and drove the 30 or so miles and it didn't cost me more than $100. I can't fathom why the ride in this posting was as expensive as it was. My experience and that of my friends has been exceptional.
Pure white text and pure black background seems to cause trouble like nothing else.
The options are i) Uber maliciously doesn't notify some users of surge ii) There was a bug which caused this user to not be notified of surge (locking in rate after clicking confirm), iii) this guy is full of shit. iv) something i haven't thought of.
What's real alright? That quote is completely unrelated to the rest of the article.
I won't even go into caring what the BBB thinks. This article doesn't seem to be well-put-together.
Just to be clear, I have no affiliation with either company. I'm just glad someone with a voice is complaining.