If you buy an Acura or Lexus, you get more amenities from the service department than you do at Honda or Toyota. If you shop at Nordstrom or Saks, you are treated differently than you are at Target or
Walmart. We spend more money on Apple products than we would on other brands in part because we find their service to be superior. And the same is true with hotels. As I said above, a high end resort should have more people on staff to handle customer requests. At any given time at the Poly you see plenty of cast members walking around with walkie talkies. They were not short-staffed.
I did not assume I was speaking to someone physically located at the Poly, but I specifically asked to be transferred to someone there and was told that I would be.
The snarky part was telling my that I was trying to "transfer [my] responsibility to the Poly" when I'd made it clear that it was our mistake. They just followed it up with more mistakes.
Sometime before 10 days would have been nice. As I said, we NEVER would have gotten a response if my husband had not called today and insisted on talking to a manager because the front desk personnel evidently chucked the reports he filled out.
Again, AS I SAID, the front desk told us they couldn't even determine whether someone had checked into the room, which seems rather specious to me. If someone had checked in, it would have been easy enough for housekeeping to knock on the door to see if the room was occupied at the time. It's not rocket science, and it would hardly be a huge imposition. And while we weren't thrilled that we got no information in the 45 minutes before we had to leave for the airport, I certainly wouldn't have been on here complaining about it. Again, it was the fact that we got no response for almost 10 days and weren't going to get one at all that bugs me.