8.5 Document for Analysis: Direct Claim (Obj. 5) Your Task. Analyze the following poorly written…

8.5  Document for Analysis: Direct Claim (Obj. 5)
Your Task. Analyze the following poorly written claim letter. List at least five weaknesses. If your instructor directs, revise it using the sug- gestions you learned in this chapter.
 
Current date
 
 
 
 
 
 
Ms. Melanie Cholston, Manager Nationwide  Car Rentals
1325 Commerce Street
Dallas, TX 75202
 
Dear Melanie Cholston:
 
I am writing this letter to inform you that you can’t have it both ways. Either you provide customers with cars with full gas tanks or you don’t. And if you don’t, you shouldn’t charge them when they return with empty tanks!
 
In view of the fact that I picked up a car at the Dallas-Ft. Worth International Airport on June 23 with an empty tank, I had to fill it immediately. Then I drove it until June 26. When I returned the car to Houston, as previously planned, I naturally let the tank go nearly empty, since that is the way I received the car in Dallas-Ft. Worth.
 
But your attendant in Houston charged me to fill the tank—$49.43 (premium gasoline at premium prices)! Although I explained to her that  I had received it with an empty tank, she kept telling me that company policy required that she charge for a fill-up. My total bill came to $426.50, which, you must agree, is a lot of money for a rental period of only three days. I have the signed rental agreement and a receipt showing that I paid the full amount and that it included $49.43 for a gas fill-up when I returned the car. Any correspondence should be directed to the under- signed at Criterion Enterprises, 402 North Griffin Street, Dallas, TX 74105.
 
Inasmuch as my company is a new customer and inasmuch as we had hoped to use your agency for our future car rentals because of your com- petitive rates, I trust that you will give this matter your prompt attention.
 
Your unhappy customer,