I called Sallie Mae last week. This is the company who loaned me money for college and then, when I graduated, convinced me to consolidate at the bargain rate of 8.25%. About five minutes after I did that, the rate dropped to 2%.
You see, I was suffering from what is commonly known as "Bonehead journalism major did not take math class in 4 years of college, and will now work to pay off student loan for next 17 years."
So I recently decided I should increase my monthly payment to the education scalpers, and went to their website to do so. It was like informational confetti: lots going on, none of it very substantial. After digging around for 10 minutes, I called the 800 number.
A man answered. He informed me that I could not adjust my monthly payments online. He went on to say that he could not make any changes for me over the phone. In fact, he continued, I would have to email Sallie Mae to request the change.
Not a problem, as I was in front of the computer and am adept at emailing.
"What's the address?" I asked.
"Um...send the email to Sallie Mae," he replied.
"That's not an email address," I said. "So maybe it's Sallie Mae...at...something?"
He mumbled a bit and put me on hold. When he returned, these are the words that came out of his mouth:
"The email is broken. You'll have to write a letter."
"I'm not writing you a letter!" I exclaimed, adding as a defense, "It's 2009! I just want to make a simple change. How is it possible that your website can't accommodate that and your email is broken?"
"Please hold on," he said. And never came back.
Jack is TWO!
10 years ago
1 comment:
1. Can't they lower your rate? Just tell 'em you need a bailout.
2. If you just send them extra money it SHOULD be applied to the principal balance.
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