0870advice.com wrote on Nov 9
th, 2006 at 11:37pm:
People that run businesses are smart people (for the most part) and selling lies to them results in one thing....very few sales !
Things have changed greatly since the 1950s when my father started in business but many successful people today are unfortunately extremely selfish complusive obsessive types who put the making of profit and success in their own career ahead of all other moral and ethical considerations. They are often prepared to breach moral and ethical codes in the relentless pursuit of profitability at all costs.
Quote:I disagree that 0870 / 0845 were never national / local rate, they were infact tied to the BT standard national and local rate up until quite recently, although non discountable. The problem for an organisation in publishing geographic numbering is that it is so inflexible with respect to growth or relocation.
This is completely untrue and shows your own incomplete knowledge of this issue which seems only to read from the standard 084/7 salesman propaganda hymn sheet here in claiming the price difference with 0870 is all a recent problem.
I moved here in December 1996 and at that stage there was already competition using Mercury on fixed line although the price difference was minimal with BT. Then starting some time around late 1997 or early 1998 indirect access call carrier competitors to BT were allowed and the cheapest (which I used) AXS Telecom on indirect access code 1615 let you call uk geographic numbers (which may then only have started 1 rather than 01) at 2p per minute but would not route calls at all to NGNs. So my GNs were costing me 2p per minute while 0870s were costing me 7.91p per minute in the weekday peak (almost 300% more). And to add insult to injury BT refused to let a customer pick a National Rate NGN number as a Friends and Family number, even though any UK GN could be selected and even one mobile number.
As the numbers weren't even 0870 back then your claim that the differential with 01/02 numbers is only a recent problem certainly isn't true and I would call nearly 300% a pretty significant price difference.
Also long before BT made the price of an 01/02 daytime call less than 50% per minute the price of an 0870 call for BT Option 1 and 2 customers on 1st July 2004 they had been offering an all geographic numbers calling plan (Option 3) and again 0844, 0845, 0870 and 0871 numbers were excluded from it.
Quote:My preferred solution would actually be a very simple and transparent approach to the numbering scheme, which would be easy for the public to recognise from the number they are dialling exactly what they are paying for the call, whilst at the same time giving lots of choice to the business owner for the band of charge the caller pays v's revenue stream they do / don't receive. Such as the following
080X = Free to Caller
081X = 1ppm to Caller
082X = 2ppm to Caller
083X = 3ppm to Caller
084X = 4ppm to Caller
085X = 5ppm to Caller
086X = 6ppm to Caller
087X = 7ppm to Caller
088X = 8ppm to Caller
089X = 9ppm to Caller
Such a numbering scheme is straight forward and transparent, provides a breadth of choice for businesses, provides the industry with opportunity to further develop services and help businesses manage their customer calls, requires little change from the current numbering scheme, provides minimal disruption to business and could be backed up with the 03XX range for public bodies.
I would alter the 09 number range so as to include these lower cost premium rate numbers in a banded way and would also make compulsory call price announcements and a statement that a revenue share is going to fund the activities of the called party compulsory for all 09 numbers before the call is connected.
Quote:The changing numbers problem is real. Many businesses will have to respray vehicle fleets, most will have to reprint stationary but the biggest problem is that numbers stay in the public domain for a long time....for example, numbers printed on tins of paint, packaging, warrentees, catalogues etc. can often be dialled years after they are printed and a business has relocated. This is why it is so important for businesses to avoid changing numbers if at all possible.
What utter tosh. Easyjet for instance had no trouble repainting their whole airline fleet to show only their website address instead of their former 0990 number. Also you guys never seems to see these terrible problems for companies when they are renumbering form their 01 or 02 number to their 0870 or 0871GN. In fact usually they can't renumber fast enough. The problem of the old out of date number is taken care of by a recorded announcement pointing to the existence of the new 0870 number and that you now have to call that.........
Quote:I agree that numbers with a high call charge should be premium rated and possibly fall under the 09 prefix, the problem here again is that this numbering system is not clear to the caller with so many bands its impossible to tell from the prefix
Introduce compulsory call price announcements and make all OCPs have set tarrifs for all calls at any point in time so they will always know the rate. If their underlying wholesale costs change then it is up to them periodically set new tariffs for customers which they will be able to clearly announce through the compulsory call price announcement.