Blog post causes change in policy

Linda Rogers was battling with her mother’s insurance company over their policy to cancel home insurance coverage for seniors who temporarily transfer domicile to a care facility. Here’s how Linda used the internet to nudge the insurance company into providing the level of care they advertise as providing:

“After blogging about my experience with CUIS, I forwarded a link to the entry to a communications person with a note about my disappointment.

Within an hour or two I received an email and then a phone call from a CUIS contact person reversing the decision to cancel my mother’s home insurance. Did my blog entry make a difference? Who knows. But, this blog’s stats show three log ins from the insurance provider in that time period.”


% Responses to “Blog post causes change in policy”

  1. mmilam Says:

    I’m actually going to work on an entry about a post office incident that I had happened today.

When you are registered and logged in you'll see a box to enter your comment. This procedure is to cut down on comment spam, a lot of which is pretty ugly stuff that neither you nor I want to see. After I approve your registration, your comment will appear.

I hope you'll take the couple of minutes needed to register for my blog, because I would like to read your comments!