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Corporate Event Company Overbooks Thousands in Equipment After Software Glitch – Software Firm Forced to Foot the Bill

by Sunny Nguyen
December 17, 2025
in Social Issues

In many modern workplaces, software is the backbone of daily operations. Yet when that software fails – especially in mission‑critical functions like equipment booking – it doesn’t just cause frustration. It can cost real money, time, and productivity.

Research has shown that enterprise software failures aren’t a small nuisance -they’re a multibillion‑dollar problem.

One industry study found that software failures cost the enterprise software market $61 billion annually, including wasted developer hours and delays caused by bugs in production systems.

Corporate Event Company Overbooks Thousands in Equipment After Software Glitch - Software Firm Forced to Foot the Bill
Not the actual photo

Here’s The Original Post:

'Won't fix your buggy software that costs us thousands of dollars per year? Fine, pay our bills then!?'

TLDR at the bottom. I hope you enjoy this one!. I am the AV supervisor for a large company that hosts events.

Specifically, I look after quotes for the technical side of corporate events - giving clients access to projectors, microphones, speakers, etc etc for their large corporate presentations, meetings and whatnot.

I also manage and brief the floor crew who actively run the events. We use a program to book our equipment which, while powerful, is a bit laggy on the...

(About $2000 per user per year and there's about 30 of us in the company that use it) Relative to how much our company makes per year, it's a pretty...

It's a good program when leveraged properly, but sometimes it can drive you mad with it's weird way of doing things.

One important feature of the program is that it tracks the booking of all equipment everywhere, including time for packing it into a room and packing it out of the...

This is useful because it prevents our team from overbooking equipment. If it's not available, the system won't let you book it - there's no way around that.

If I am short on equipment, I can book extra equipment from another rental company and on-charge that to the client - when I know in advance that I need...

Anyway, cue big presentation from the booking company showing their latest version of the booking software. "It's great, it's faster! It's better than ever!"

We have a busy week come up and I am flat out floored with paperwork, pulling a 60 hour week (Our company is fantastic with overtime.

We don't get overtime pay but we do get time in lieu. Our bosses are totally cool about it. So if I work 1hr overtime, I get 1hr off the...

Do a 60 hr week and you get 20hrs off later). Anyway, one of my floor crew comes to me.... Floor Crew: Hey OP? This equipment isn't available... We've already...

Me: What? It should be available.

Floor Crew: No, it's definitely not. I just set it up for another event two hours ago and that event is running for three days.

Cue me running back to me desk and rechecking all my paperwork. FYI, equipment lists going out for events is often over one hundred lines long - hence why we...

The system should do it. As it turns out, all our equipment was overbooked multiple times - in many cases, overbooked on three events or more.

I make multiple phone calls to rental companies and bring in rental equipment on short notice.

That's expensive - and I can't charge it to the client on such short notice. If you took our expected profits for that week, you could add a negative symbol...

I log a job with the company that makes our booking software and then proceed to double check all our upcoming events. Hooo boy... alotta overbooked equipment.

(Note: These events are often independently created by multiple people at different times of the year, there's no way they'd themselves check if the equipment was available, it's just not...

Hence why we rely on the system that up until now, worked). The booking software company is extremely dismissive, saying that its a rare glitch and that they'd "look into...

Cue one month later and still no fix. I'm now spending significantly more time double checking all our events for overbooking.

The booking software company still doesn't care about a small-ish company like us.

Frustrated, I ask my boss for a copy of our service agreement with the company. He's as annoyed with the situation as I am so we go through it together.

Turns out, there's a clause in there saying that the booking company would provide compensation in the event of total system failure (In the event that the system can't even...

Well... we'd definitely call this a system failure... of sorts. It's failure is costing us a lot of money.

So we send the bills of all our rentals that cover over-bookings to the booking software company.

That gets their attention quickly when the total bill amounts to more than triple how much they make off us each year..

Booking Software Company: Hey OP, what's with these bills?

Me: Here's the job reference you still haven't responded to after two months now, and here's the link between each rental and each event that's overbooked.

Booking Software Company: Uhh... there's no way the system is letting you overbook equipment. And you can't send the bills to us for every event that's overbooked..

Me: \Shares screen\ Alright... let's test it.

The Booking Software Company shares their screen as well, logging into our version of the booking system.

They proceed to book some equipment that should 100% not be available. True to their word, the system doesn't let them do it.

I then book the exact same equipment on the exact same event but from my computer. My boss as witness, the system lets me do it without any alarm.

This surprises them and they start talking about potential fixes. They also say they're willing to pay for the rentals up until now.

Two months later, we're still billing them for every rented equipment, they're still paying without questioning and we still don't have a fix.

I've changed the procedures to check for overbooked equipment though, so we aren't running around like madmen trying to fix things last minute anymore.

TLDR: Booking Software Company releases a software update, letting us unintentionally overbook equipment.

They ignore our requests for a software patch and we leverage their service agreement for "compensation" in system failure.

A Bug That Shouldn’t Have Happened But Did

You work as an AV supervisor for a large events company. Your team relies on a booking system that:

  • Tracks every piece of technical equipment (projectors, microphones, speakers, etc.).

  • Prevents double‑booking by blocking unavailable equipment.

  • Allows last‑minute rentals when actual shortages occur.

This system should stop scheduling conflicts before they happen. Instead, after a software update, it started doing the exact opposite – leting multiple events book the same items at the same time. The system that was supposed to prevent overbooking became the cause of it.

That wasn’t a small bug. It caused:

  • Significant last‑minute rental costs

  • Hours of extra manual checking for you and your team

  • Profit losses for your busiest week of the year

Pocketing the Cost – Until You Weren’t Willing To Anymore

Initially, the software company dismissed your bug reports, calling it a “rare glitch” and promising they’d look into it. Weeks and months passed with no fix. Meanwhile, you were spending hours manually validating every booking, defeating the whole purpose of the software.

Eventually, you and your manager dug into the service agreement and found a clause that stated the vendor would provide compensation in the event of total system failure. You interpreted the broken booking logic, fundamental to your workflows, as exactly that. So you did something bold: you started billing the software company for the actual rental costs incurred because their system allowed overbooking.

That wasn’t small money. The total bills far exceeded what the vendor made from your company in a year. That got their attention. Rather than fight it, they began reimbursing the costs and are now working on a fix.

Why This Matters – Software Bugs Cost More Than You Think

It’s not just your company that suffers when software doesn’t work as advertised. Across industries, poor software quality imposes real business costs:

• Enterprise software failures cost the enterprise market $61 billion annually.
This figure reflects the hours engineers waste debugging and the delays caused by failing tests and bugs. PR Newswire

• Software defects can cost companies far more after deployment than during development.
Industry research shows that fixing a bug after release can be up to 100× more expensive than addressing the same issue during early development.

• Poor software quality impacts brand trust and customer retention.
Studies indicate that a significant percentage of users abandon software products after encountering even a few bugs, damaging reputation and future business opportunities.

While most studies focus on customer‑facing apps, the principle holds for internal systems too: when software doesn’t work, time and money are lost in support, workarounds, and manual verification.

What Experts Say About Software Quality

Quality assurance (QA) and testing aren’t just “nice to have.” In today’s digital economy:

“Every business is now a software business. Poor quality software can erode customer trust, drive up hidden support costs, and create operational failures that ripple through an organization.”
— BetterQA report on software testing importance. BetterQA

Good QA practices—like automated testing, continuous integration, and routine regression tests—don’t just reduce bugs, they protect the business. According to industry analysts, rigorous testing can:

  • Reduce defects significantly

  • Decrease costly hotfixes after release

  • Improve overall system reliability

When these practices aren’t prioritized, bugs like the one you encountered become a structural problem, not an isolated hiccup.

Lessons From Your Story

Your experience highlights several key points that many companies learn the hard way:

1. High cost doesn’t guarantee high quality.
Just because software is expensive doesn’t mean it’s reliable or well‑tested.

2. A “rare glitch” can have very real costs.
Software bugs aren’t just technical—they have operational and financial impact.

3. Service agreements matter.
Understanding contractual protections can turn a loss into leverage.

4. Vendors sometimes only act when accountability hits their bottom line.
Reimbursement wasn’t offered until you connected real cost to real contractual obligations.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Many applauded the bold move of billing the company for their broken system, while others shared similar experiences with buggy enterprise software. 

poignantMrEcho − Software patch=changing the language in future service agreements Lol

coppit − The amount of crap software out there that people charge $$$ for is amazing to me. We saw something similar with data center asset management software.

Big promises, and lots of consulting and training. I feel like they target VPs, and hope they will be too embarrassed to admit a mistake. (Or move on before the...

Ron_Fuckin_Swanson − Why didn’t they just roll you back to an older version of the software?

ikeme84 − It's faster. No s__t, it's not doing any checks in the background anymore.

absolutelynoshame − Hey friend, for what you claim this costs your company absolutely should talk to a local shop about getting something custom because that service agreement is ludicrous.

There are plenty of local developers that would be willing to work with you on something like this so that your company wouldn’t have to drop $60k yearly,

given there’s only 30 of you managing what appears to be a relatively simple database, and you’d have the added bonus of working in features you may want that you...

Some commenters offered advice on QA practices, contractual protections, and ways to prevent overbooking disasters, turning a frustrating situation into a learning opportunity for professionals across industries.

aheny − Fyi, that overtime arrangement isn't great, it's the worse they can do. A premium should be applied to your banked time, at least time and a half, for...

nickis84 − Yeah, I had to talk our IT department into letting me have two accounts for testing purposes.

They said I could change my role in the software according to account manager for testing purposes.

Proceeded to show them how it didn't quite work exactly as intended. I got two accounts for everyone in my security ground.

Only three of us, but hey they had planned giving none of us two accounts!

bean3194 − Christ, we just went through this with the software at my company. Same kind of b__lshit. New update, better, faster. .. and it's completely f__king broken.

Not a computer in our company can do ALL the things. Now we had to swap computers to do different things during a g__damn plague.

Proud_Positive_2998 − Damn straight these bozos should be picking up the tab! And it sounds like someone in sales starting selling this program before it was ready to be released,...

samanime − That cost is INSANE. I actually work for a company that makes software most would consider quite expensive for a field that is also far more profitable (medical).

We don't even charge that much. If they're going to charge that much, they better damn well make sure it works. At least they're paying your expenses, but that is...

Software bugs are more than programmer annoyances – they’re business problems. The fact that a critical system could allow overbooking events might seem like an edge case, but your real‑world losses show how a flawed tool can cascade into actual financial harm.

You didn’t just complain – you used the tools available (the service agreement and documentation of damage) to make the vendor accountable when their product failed you.

And honestly? That’s exactly what any professional business should do when a tool they rely on doesn’t work as advertised.

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/0 votes | 0%

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen writes for DailyHighlight.com, focusing on social issues and the stories that matter most to everyday people. She’s passionate about uncovering voices and experiences that often go unheard, blending empathy with insight in every article. Outside of work, Sunny can be found wandering galleries, sipping coffee while people-watching, or snapping photos of everyday life - always chasing moments that reveal the world in a new light.

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