I didn't realize I was speaking the the CEO, now I get the sense of entitlement, as no employee would be so belligerent to act like this in a public form.
The last statement should tell the community all they need to know:
We have the right to refuse service to whomever we wish.
Enough Screenshots were provided showing your company giving the domains back, as they were freshly expired, and within grace at your discretion renewal period, but removed from the account regardless without notification. What you claim BS, your team did not claim, if so why did they push the domains back?
Instead of being understanding, and attentive, you really made your company look really bad on this forum today. I know you don't care, and that is the problem.
Maybe let your employees handle these scenarios from now on, maybe you lost touch with the working class.
The last person who DM'd me where you provoke your right to refuse service felt like spaceship bait, and switched them with cheap pricing, and moved their names out. In doing so got that email, well within your rights, and you by no means refute it, just as you have the right to refuse service, customers have the right to choose where they do business.
In the statement where you state you have the right to refuse anyone service, your tone sounds awfully harsh, here is an analysis of how it came off:
Tone Analysis:
- Defensive: The phrase “no denying our policy here” comes off as curt and dismissive rather than explanatory.
- Accusatory: Saying some customers “abuse our low transfer pricing” and “game our low prices” casts the customer in a negative light, even if they’re not part of the problem.
- Overly blunt: “We have the right to refuse service to whomever we wish” is legally accurate but sounds harsh and confrontational in customer service.
- Lacking empathy: There’s no effort to acknowledge or understand the customer’s perspective or confusion.