Quote:I have no idea how you guys are going to get your message across and/or how to publicise what has happened and what it is hoped will happen.
Some heavy advertsising by Ofcom and ASA would seem to be in order. The quickest way would be to include some details on every business phone bill.
Quote:Not one person had any idea about what has been discussed here.
Little is known of these changes out there in the wider world because they haven't been formally announced. They'll be announced in 2013 and businesses will probably be given several years to comply.
Quote:A significant majority believed 0845 numbers were charged at BT local rate.
Unsurprising. The term "local rate" gets used a lot but it is, in itself, completely meaningless.
Quote:A significant majority also believed that 0845 numbers were included in their mobile/geo. call package because BT include them (the power of marketing).
Also not surprising. Do BT include 0845? I do know that 0870 is included with BT. Where things go badly wrong is that many people incorrectly assume that 0844/0843 and 0871/0872 are also included because the numbers "look similar".
Quote:What was most alarming was that no one was really bothered.
Have any of them ever used a mobile phone to phone a bank or power company? Five quid buys you 12 minutes and 12 seconds - less than the average queue time for most of these types of numbers. With a contract phone, calls to 01, 02 and 03 would be inclusive. From a pay as you go phone you'd get almost double the time for calling 01, 02 and 03 as you get for calling 08 numbers.
Quote:We seem to be sleepwalking into having yet another de-regulated service industry, which will inevitably result in significantly higher charges to the consumer.
Telecoms was deregulated some years ago - but some caps were applied to BT pricing which will soon end. Consumers are conned when companies quote those capped call costs as if they are the norm - and companies have been allowed to get away with doing that for far too long.
Imagine if in the shop a sign said "bread is 80 pence per loaf", but you were charged two quid for it at the till, you'd go nuts. The shop's response might be "oh we only show the price for the Acme mini loaf and none of the others". That's the sort of garbage that companies are getting away with when it comes to declaring the price of calling them by telephone.
So, you can unhappily substitute "has already" in place of "will". For example, the 1200 GPs using 084 numbers have collectively caused their patients to over-spend on their phone bills by about one billion quid over the last seven years.
Add in banks, power companies, travel agents, department stores, and others and it's tens of billions.