We've been many years with the various european campsite operators and have been increasingly irritated with the move to a more corporate, less customer sympathetic approach from
Eurocamp/Keycamp, yet my latest experience with them ensures I'll never deal with them again. On leaving my accommodation, for which we'd paid over £1600 for two weeks in August, I realised I'd left the contents of my wallet in the bedroom cupboard - five credit cards and some british cash. I called Eurocamp CS on my return home and asked if they could ask the couriers to check the location. The rep refused to do this and insisted instead I complete a lost property form and I would be advised in 28 days if anything is handed in. On pointing out this was cash and credit cards and not an umbrella, the response from the supervisor was "we have thousands of campsites, we cannot possibly ring them"... well yes actually, you can - in this day of mobile phones I think that's called "customer service"...
Even two letters to the CEO of Holidaybreak.plc, the parent company, were merely passed back to customers services for them to send out a 'copy/paste' standard response - a complaint about the Customer Services is passed the the Customer Services dept to address ? hmmm...
14 days later I receive a generic letter saying nothing had been handed in - given the property was left in Eurocamp's secure property either the courier or the subsequent customer will hence know there whereabouts of the cash, and I doubt the holiday makers would pocket the property...
I just hope the likes of Canvas stick with their friendly customer service that I'm used to - a simple call immediately to the reps would have sorted my problem.
Holidaybreak CEO - if you ever do get to read this, can I suggest you may do better moving to the banking system where such an approach to customers is more tolerated, sadly.