Quote:... 070 sounds like its just another mobile numbers so mobile users with cross network bundled minutes will wrongly think these 070s are included and cost them 0p per minute instead of the 50p per minute they do cost (another complaint to make in the 070 consultation)
I had an 070 number when it came out in about 1997 or so. At the time, there were two numbers available: 07020, charged at about 10ppm, or 07050 charged at about 35 ppm. I think other 070 providers had a similar structure. How is the caller to know what they were being charged, unless they had a list of all the 070 numbers and which were on what tariff?
However I had one cold call saying these (then-)new 070 numbers were like US 1-800 numbers; I told the salesman they were more like 1-976 (the forerunner to 1-900) numbers.
Quote:Why most 070 call tariffs are so high when there is no revenue share to the end user and only the same call redirections options that are possible on 084x/7x. But surely since no revenue share to the end user is allowed 070 numbers should actually be cheaper to call than 084/087.
Indeed. A couple of years later, I looked at an NGN for my small business. I managed to get an 0800 number at a cost of 4ppm (incoming), and was able to change the number to any UK landline, much the same as the 070 numbers. So, there seems to be no difference between the 0800/0845/0870/070 numbers other than tariff (and tariff seems to determine the range of geographic termination). It all, I guess, goes back to marketing; how much can the tele-con industry rip us off without us knowing we're being ripped off?
Quote:So surely Ofcom should be investigating why market forces do not seem to be managing to lower 070 call cost rates.
But market forces have, somewhat, lowered 070 call cost rates; it's called 0870... imagine if student dorms all used 070 numbers (as has been suggested)? There, market forces to counter the extortionate 070 rates come in the form of mobile phones. But there are those who have carved a little monopoly niche within an environment with no mobile phones and no alternate telephony provider. Did someone mention P******line?