Do 50,000 people (teenagers) filling out surveys for money justify AT&T deserving the worst customer service rating from Consumer Reports? I am not trying to defend AT&T but I would argue that the Consumer Reports survey methodology is flawed. Service and coverage is a local issue and no one should trust surveys that represent .02% of the entire U.S. wireless market. They need to provide more transparency about who is filling out the survey based on this quote: "AT&T ranked the lowest in overall consumer satisfaction in 19 of the 26 surveyed cities (which), ranging from New York and San Francisco to (as FierceWireless points out) Atlanta, Cleveland, and Houston. Verizon, meanwhile, ranked first in all 26 cities in the Consumer Reports survey. Ouch."
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Consumer Reports Has No Credibility in Mobile
Do 50,000 people (teenagers) filling out surveys for money justify AT&T deserving the worst customer service rating from Consumer Reports? I am not trying to defend AT&T but I would argue that the Consumer Reports survey methodology is flawed. Service and coverage is a local issue and no one should trust surveys that represent .02% of the entire U.S. wireless market. They need to provide more transparency about who is filling out the survey based on this quote: "AT&T ranked the lowest in overall consumer satisfaction in 19 of the 26 surveyed cities (which), ranging from New York and San Francisco to (as FierceWireless points out) Atlanta, Cleveland, and Houston. Verizon, meanwhile, ranked first in all 26 cities in the Consumer Reports survey. Ouch."
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Updated
December 02, 2009