I don’t know why when contacting Apple Support about a problem, the answer to the same exact problem can vary so widely.
Here’s an example. I contacted Apple Support because I enabled ScreenTime in iOS 16.5 and MacOS 13.4 and neither time nor settings are syncing across devices (the later is listed as fixed in the release notes). I called 3 times and got these 3 responses:
1. First person consulted a senior advisor and told me ScreenTime does not support syncing settings between devices which is demonstrably incorrect (https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT210387#limitusage). He then asked if I wanted him to make an appointment for me at an Apple Store. I declined.
2. Second person escalated me to a senior care advisor who seamed friendly, but recommended I reboot my router and if that didn’t work, sign out of iCloud and back in. He said engineering would not accept an elevation if those weren’t done. I said I don’t like signing out of iCloud as it’s a pain setting things back up when I sign back in. He told me he signs out of iCloud several times a week (really?). He said he’d send me a link to get me back to senior care for when that was done. Despite my better judgement I did as he suggested on my iPad (didn’t work). The link just took me to the case, but calling back put me at the lowest level of support.
3. Third person who escalated me to a different senior care advisor. This person seemed much more qualified. He recommended that I never to sign out of iCloud unless directed to do so and that doing so isn’t a requirement for escalating to engineering. He said he’d research the issue and get back to me and gave me a link to directly send him messages. I’ve had advisors promise to call back and never done so, but at least this is promising.
We have 3 different responses ranging from giving blatantly incorrect information, to passing the buck to somewhat promising. Apple used to have standards. It shouldn’t take 3 calls to reach someone at Apple support who at least gives an indication that they may try to help.
This isn’t an outlier either. This has been the norm when contacting Apple Support the past several years to the point where most times I don’t even bother.
What happened to Apple support?
Here’s an example. I contacted Apple Support because I enabled ScreenTime in iOS 16.5 and MacOS 13.4 and neither time nor settings are syncing across devices (the later is listed as fixed in the release notes). I called 3 times and got these 3 responses:
1. First person consulted a senior advisor and told me ScreenTime does not support syncing settings between devices which is demonstrably incorrect (https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT210387#limitusage). He then asked if I wanted him to make an appointment for me at an Apple Store. I declined.
2. Second person escalated me to a senior care advisor who seamed friendly, but recommended I reboot my router and if that didn’t work, sign out of iCloud and back in. He said engineering would not accept an elevation if those weren’t done. I said I don’t like signing out of iCloud as it’s a pain setting things back up when I sign back in. He told me he signs out of iCloud several times a week (really?). He said he’d send me a link to get me back to senior care for when that was done. Despite my better judgement I did as he suggested on my iPad (didn’t work). The link just took me to the case, but calling back put me at the lowest level of support.
3. Third person who escalated me to a different senior care advisor. This person seemed much more qualified. He recommended that I never to sign out of iCloud unless directed to do so and that doing so isn’t a requirement for escalating to engineering. He said he’d research the issue and get back to me and gave me a link to directly send him messages. I’ve had advisors promise to call back and never done so, but at least this is promising.
We have 3 different responses ranging from giving blatantly incorrect information, to passing the buck to somewhat promising. Apple used to have standards. It shouldn’t take 3 calls to reach someone at Apple support who at least gives an indication that they may try to help.
This isn’t an outlier either. This has been the norm when contacting Apple Support the past several years to the point where most times I don’t even bother.
What happened to Apple support?