When I moved to Fayetteville, NC, I ordered a Sprint DSL internet line to be put into our house to support our business. (That was "the fast thing that would still be affordable" back in the day.)
I was working a project in DC during the week so I was only home about a day and a half each week on the weekend.
The DSL line was put in and it did not work. Help desk didn't help so I waited until next weekend when I was home and tried again. This went on for about 3 months.
At this point I was convinced the help desk could not help me.
So, went on the internet with dial-up service and found the list of major corporate officers at Sprint for investors to review. I picked the name based on job titles and phoned sprint and asked to speak with that senior VP.
I got his secretary, who is whom I actually wanted.
I explained the problem and how long it had been going on. I explained that if it was not resolved very promptly, I would be contacting my local city councilmen, county commissioners, the NC Utilities Commission, and the US Federal Communications Commission. I was going to ask them all one very simple question, "How is our area supposed to attract new businesses when we cannot provide basic telecommunications services?"
She assured me that Sprint would address it promptly.
That was 4pm on a Thursday. (I had come home early that week. :) )
At 8:30am the next day, Friday morning, the telephone started ringing. It rang all day long. People from Sprint from all over the country were calling to help. They didn't know what I needed, they just knew they really, really wanted to help me.
I arranged for a technician to come to my home the next Monday morning at 8am. He worked on the problem until 8pm that night. He replaced the dsl modem. He went to the office and changed settings. He came back and checked more things. That afternoon he determined that my neighborhood had been so poorly wired that the signal wasn't coming to my home clearly and strongly enough. It was going to take a $25,000 booster to overcome the problem. When he asked is boss how the company was going to make back that $25,000 at $49.99 a month, the answer that came back was, "I don't care, I just want it fixed today!"
The right question to the right person can be very powerful.