Quote:I think it's a little ironic that you're making money from Google AdWords selling the services of the very companies your so critical of.
This has been discussed over and over. Some threads which discuss this are
Ethical?? and
Gamekeeper turned poacher??. Have a look at the
Site Related section.
Quote:0870 numbers provide major benefits to the customers of SMEs who make very little and often NO money from using them. Benefits which are never mentioned in this type of headline grabbing "Ripoff Britain" corporate bashing nonsense.
That is because it is difficult to explain, and the reason these numbers are so widespread. Even telling people that these numbers cost more to call than a normal (geographical) number gets a response like "and your point is...?"
But of course they're quick to believe the adverts put out by the telcos telling them they can save this and save that!
Quote:How? By allowing complex number translation from an 0870 number to a variety of terminating numbers depending on the time of day, which staff might be available to answer a call and so on, smaller companies are able to substantially improve the service they offer to their customers. ...
...All at the direct expense of their customers. NTS is fine, but should be paid for by the receiving party.
Quote:Why should BT be the only company to profit from telephone call charges? If a very small charge (typically 1p per minute) on the standard national rate helps firms to respond more effectively to their customers, I'm sure customers will be more than happy to pay it.
Why should we all pay more just to allow other providers to profit? Competition should not be at the expense of the consumer, which it is.
For a company to receive, typically 2p or 3p per minute (but can be up to around 4p per minute), the caller has to pay around 7.5p/min. Thus, they are a
premium rate number and should be titled as such
and prefixed with 09 to indicate this.
This also means that there is (in the daytime) 3.5p/min or more on top of what the company being called receives. This is higher than a normal geographical call and the price of this cannot fall due to competition. Therefore, they are stifling competition.
Quote:If you seriously think that destroying customer loyalty by keeping somebody on hold just to make money out of them (at pennies per minute) is the intention of big businesses, I think you're very misguided.
The main issue is that these numbers force the calling customer to pay for the NTS, which the company being called should pay for. Call queuing is one aspect which some companies/organisations seem to be doing. Revenue sharing certainly doesn't give them an incentive to shorten calls.