PennyMunn
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Posts: 4
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This morning I had an 0870 experience that convinced me that legislation is needed that forbids companies from profiting from their non-geographical numbers. I had a letter from parcelforce about an item I'd ordered from the USA that needed £30 in VAT and other charges paying before it could be delivered. Parcelforce has a website on which you can do many things like tracking parcels and managing accounts, but the only options in the letter for payment were to send a cheque or pay by phone, 0870 number provided. Because I wanted the goods delivered tomorrow, I opted for the 0870 route, and initially it looked as though this wouldn't cost too much. The automated response offered me five options and when I pressed the number for 'make a payment' the system asked me to key in my delivery reference number, card number, finish date, start date, issue number and security code. I patiently tapped in these details and for each item the system read the input back to me and asked me to confirm that it was correct by pressing '1'. When the information had all been entered, the system read out my postcode and the amount I needed to pay, both of which I confirmed by pressing '1', then asked me to wait while payment was taken. The whole process took a little over 5 minutes in all, and seemed very efficient. However, after a few seconds the system's voice announced that my payment had failed and that it was putting me through to an operater who would take payment manually. For the next half hour I listened to lively music interrupted every minute or so by a message telling me that no operators were available and I was being held in a queue. After this time had elapsed, I lost patience, rang off and used this website to find the geographical number for Parcelforce. The response to the geographical number was a complete contrast to the 0870 number. The phone was answered after about ten rings by a switchboard operator who put me through to the correct operator (no waiting in a queue at all) who established my identity and took my payment in about two minutes flat. Significantly, she did not need to record the start date and issue number of my card in order to put the payment through - something that had taken about a minute to input and confirm on the 0870 system. The discrepancy between my experiences with the two numbers makes me suspect that large corporations are deliberately setting up their 0870- accessed automated systems to delay the consumer and profit themselves. This is not only a flagrant breach of the consumer's trust, it is also a sheer waste of everybody's time. The simplest way of stopping this kind of abuse would be legislation that prohibits companies from being paid a proportion of the revenue that they generate on their 0870 numbers. If they themselves were not profiting, they wouldn't spend time and money setting up systems that deliberately keep their customers hanging on the phone, and the country's efficiency would improve all round by not having so much time wasted. Do we have any hope of such legislation being proposed, perhaps by a private members bill? Are there any legal / political experts out there with some good ideas on how a campaign for legislation could defeat the timewasting inefficiency of our non-geographic number system?
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