‘First-Come’ by Claim, Arbitrary in Practice: Mastercard’s Fragmented Enrollment Process Questioned
On 23 October 2025 at 10:01 AM, I received an invitation from Mastercard Travel & Lifestyle to attend a Bang & Olufsen experience, explicitly instructing registration via a designated WhatsApp link. I complied within 26 minutes. A staff member later acknowledged my registration and promised an update by 3:00 PM that day. No update was provided. Only after I followed up the next morning was I told the event was fully booked and that I could be placed on a waitlist, without any disclosure of queue position, event capacity, or applicant numbers.
Mastercard maintains that participants were selected on a “first-come, first-served” basis, yet has admitted that registrations were taken across three unlinked channels—WhatsApp, email, and telephone. Without a centralized system with synchronized time-stamping, it is technically impossible to determine who applied first. The claim is therefore not merely questionable, but unverifiable. This contradiction is compounded by the invitation itself, which designated WhatsApp as the official enrollment channel, making the inclusion of email and telephone entries a direct breach of the stated process.
When these substantive issues were raised, Mastercard did not address them. Instead, it attempted to deflect the complaint by offering an unrelated Bang & Olufsen experience that bore no resemblance to the event originally advertised. After I rejected this inadequate substitute, Mastercard requested a phone discussion, to which I immediately agreed. No call ever took place.
This pattern—procedural contradiction, followed by deflection, and ultimately silence—raises serious concerns about governance, transparency, and good-faith complaint handling. More than three months later, the matter remains unresolved.








