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At around 8:30 pm on Monday, 21 November, my phone was stolen from me. The incident occurred at the crowded Saket Metro bus stop, while I was inside a feeder bus and the thief outside a window.
By the time I could get off the bus and chase him, he had disappeared in the crowd.
I looked around for a while before returning home, determined to do all I legally and possibly could in such a case, but feeling hopeless and dejected.
I filed an e-FIR, used Android Device Manager to try and locate the phone, placed a request to erase data with the Manager as well as my office IT service center.
I knew that I had logged out of banking apps and they could not be accessed without MPins, but the Paytm app had login details saved. So I tried to lock my Paytm account via their website.
I then used their customer care page to request a block on my account. I received an acknowledgement of this request almost instantly, (9:40 pm, 21 November, query #10133775). However, I received no reply, so I took to Twitter (11:59 pm, 21 November):
Next morning, I see no response to my e-mail, but see this response to the tweet (7:35 am, 22 November):
So I sent them another e-mail request which was again acknowledged (9:04 am, 22 November, query #10152004). Again, no reply, even by the evening, so I reply to their tweet:
This tweet, unsurprisingly, did not get any response. In the meanwhile, I had not only got a replacement SIM card from Airtel, but also had the SIM cards activated within the estimated time of 4-6 hours, despite being told that there may be a further delay as my number had been barred due to filing the FIR. I was thus able to receive the OTP now via the on call option (SMS services took a further 24 hours, as estimated, to get reactivated), and logged into Paytm.
I quickly used up the balance in my Paytm wallet in order to close the account. I waited for a day to ensure those transactions did come through, and then tried closing my account this evening.
My requesting customer care to do so got me the no-less-surprising response that “Paytm account cannot be deleted, but we can block it for you. Please help us with the mail from your registered email id stating the same.”
Again, for a digital service, Paytm’s frankly ridiculous, repetitive insistence on e-mail confirmation is nothing short of painful, especially given that there is NO guarantee your e-mail will actually merit a response from them, as so amply demonstrated by this experience.
Update: @Paytmcare chose to respond to this story via both tweet (2:42am, 24 November) and e-mail (6:15am, 24 November).
The tweet asked me to check my email with reference to the request for closing my account (query #10291894).
Only, their reply was to my e-mail of 22 November (query #10152004). Not only did they get this mixed up, their response was on how I could get a new mobile number updated in my account while my old number was inaccessible – whereas my query had been about blocking my account.
At this point, I could only conclude that Paytm’s customer care is, in addition to being poorly managed, also poorly trained to respond to customer queries. And yes, Paytm has not yet confirmed that my account has been blocked, as of 9:25am, 25 November.
(A marketer by profession, Godavar is a poet and blogger who has previously published one collection of poems. This is a personal blog piece and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same. The article first appeared on www.aamjanta.com)
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