Verizon (for those unaware) is a humongous telecommunications company with a very large presence in the United States. It’s more or less guaranteed that anyone you talk to in the US knows what Verizon is and what they do.
Verizon’s infrastructure is also humongous (obviously). This means they can offer anything to do with telecommunications. So, if you’re the type that uses one company for everything, Verizon can usually do it.
When I first moved to Florida two years ago I decided to go all-Verizon. Why? Because it was easy and they had the lowest price. Furthermore you can combine everything using their “One-Bill” service to make managing services easy.
Or so it would seem.
Here’s My Story
After saving up for a while I was able to upgrade apartments (known as a “flat” in UK). The new apartment is literally 100 yards away from the old one. Remember that. 100 yards away. However, it’s a different physical location, so my Verizon land-line and DSL must be moved.
Okay, simple process, right? Call Verizon, inform them you’re moving and move the service. Get informed of the installation date and have everything activated on a specific date. Simple. Easy. Right?
Wrong.
During the phone call with Verizon, I was informed the scheduled activation of my land-line service was for the April 15th. The DSL for the 22nd. Being that I absolutely depend on my internet connectivity for my job, I asked if they could possibly have the DSL activated on the 15th along with the land-line.
The person I spoke to stated she wasn’t sure but that she could transfer me to someone who would help me out. At this point I spoke with another rep who said yes, there’s a good chance I could get my DSL activated on the 15th. I was assigned a work order number. Everything was to happen on the 15th. Done deal.
The day of the 15th happens.
Land-line: No dial tone.
DSL: Not activated.
I call Verizon. I am routed to dial-up internet support to a person who can barely speak English and has absolutely no clue what DSL is.
After hashing it out with her I’m transferred to someone else. I inform him of what’s going on. He promptly puts me on hold for about 15 minutes.
He comes back and states there’s basically no way to get my DSL activated on the 15th (that day). I informed him the work order would indicate otherwise. He starts quoting the “rule book” to me and says it’s not possible. After not getting anywhere I hung up out of frustration.
After regaining my composure I call back and speak with someone else. Again I am quoted the rule book and told that my service absolutely positively could not be activated until the 22nd – even though I have a work order stating otherwise.
I hung up on her too. I’d had enough at that point.
Verizon in no uncertain terms outright lied to me. I was told services would be activated on a certain day and none of it happened. And when I called back I was fed nothing but excuses.
Today I called Brighthouse and ordered service.
Want to take a guess at when it will be activated?
Tomorrow (the 17th).
No 5-day waits. No “we won’t work with you” b.s. The tech will show up tomorrow with cable modem in tow, set me up and I’m ready to go. And yes, it’s that easy.
Why?
Here in the Tampa Bay area of Florida, Bright House is the largest cable provider. But the difference is that when you call, you are speaking with a local Florida office and not some distant call center in the middle of nowhere. The techs are all local, the service is local. All of it is local.
But Here’s the Big Kicker
When I called to cancel my Verizon land-line and DSL, I was finally routed to a Tampa Florida office. After all this b.s. I went thru, now I get a local office?
Want to know something else? The Verizon rep was fantastic! She was pleasant! I was almost (repeat, almost) sorry I had to cancel!
If I had direct contact with a local Verizon office in Florida, I am 100% sure that absolutely none of the b.s. I encountered would have ever happened. Reason? Because they can contact local dispatch easily.
The Moral of the Story
If at all possible (even with big telecom), have your dealings only with local offices. Find the phone numbers and keep track of them (because they’re not easy to locate). When you stay local you get better service under most circumstances.
And the Golden Rule of Verizon is this:
I have never complained about Verizon products. The product has never been bad. It’s the customer service that’s horrible. If you have Verizon service of any kind and like it, good for you. Just pray you never have to change anything on your account via customer service or you’ll end up in a nightmare like I did.

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