Is it illegal for somebody to cancel an order and the reopen the same order so that can take credit for the order.
16 replies (most recent on top)
If you determine your actions according to what is legal and what is not then you are probably not trustworthy.
6 hours ago by Anonymous | 1 reaction (+0/-1)
Post ID: @teo+1tUNQo
Really? AT&T sales persons worrying about being trustworthy? That makes them SVP material.
They have a monthly report. Top abusers get coached. Three coaching, you gone.
Report it to asset protection
That’s standard operating procedure here. Always has been.
If you determine your actions according to what is legal and what is not then you are probably not trustworthy.
If you have to ask, then yes its probably illegal. lmgtfy
https://oig.hhs.gov/fraud/
https://www.gao.gov/about/what-gao-does/fraud
https://www.justice.gov/criminal/criminal-fraud/report-fraud
https://reportfraud.ftc.gov/
ask you manager
You do-nothing sales jockeys will all be on the couch soon anyway
Yes you can only steal from customers. Never Att.
Technically yes. Since it violates AT&Ts rules about commissionable sales, it's considered fraud. However, fraud charges have financial minimums.
If the deal is large enough, say 5k commission pay out or if multiple incidents add up to 5k, it's felony fraud.
So f'n what!
That literally has been happening the entire 28 years I've worked for this company
Not illegal. Unethical, yes. Violation of COBC, yes. Needed to make your numbers this month, yes. Don't let a little fraud keep you from feeding your family. You work for AT&T.
If you want a non meme answer, while it's not illegal, you'll eventually pi-s off the wrong person. They'll find you, since you can see who did it, and you might get your attuid deactivated. Seen it happen before to others in my market doing this.
"Illegal"? Lol.
No. This BAU in mobility. Deviate from this practice and expect to be placed on a disciplinary step.