bbb_uk wrote on Feb 11
th, 2007 at 2:46pm:
Most likely because they didn't (and dont) get that many of their customers trying to route their calls back via BT.
There is no BT routing involved in this. This was the operator service I got just by dialling 100 with no 1280 prefix involved. If I dial 150 I get an automated message telling me to call my phone company's customer service number, although if I dial 1280150 I still get through to BT customer services as obviously I would do on 0800 100150 on any phone in the country.
So this is an official Post Office Operator service offered under contract to BT. If I ring Post Office customer services and query it they find the charge on their Post Office Tariff screen somewhere and Post Office charge £4.20 for this service compared to an alleged official charge of £4.00 by BT (never ever charged it in my time with them despite using the Operator once every 2 or 3 months for problem numbers) which in practice they never charge if there is a fault on the line you are calling.
But because it is so high but not a premium rate 09 service it has just been left off all their tariff sheets or fallen between them
Quote:TBH, I can't understand why you're still with them NGM?
I was going to move back to BT but the BT person I spoke to when I was going to do this was thoroughly offhand rude and disinterested in me as a customer and then told me there was a minimum 90 day contract period with BT there were charges for breaching if I moved anywhere else in the period. That was the last straw.
Post Office try to do a pretty good job with 0800 for customer services and well presented bills. It isn't their fault if BT charges such a high amount for WLR line rental and/or the Post Office has less deep dirty fighting fund pockets than BT clearly have that it can't afford to subsidise the cost of Caller Display as BT does (and anyway BT Retail just pays BT Wholesale which then adds to BT PLC's overall profits). I hate BT as a large, inefficient and monpolistic company. Why should I go back to them as long as the Post Office let me use 18185. Also the high Operator charge isn't the Post Office's fault. BT is blatantly acting anticompetitively by imposing this discretionary charge rarely or never on BT's customers if they ask to be connected but on a blanket across the board basis on its rivals.
Quote:But most of all, known for a fact that one morning you are not going to wake up to find that PO HomePhone have all of the sudden stopped/blocked the use of indirect access providers such as 18185 and I can see this happening in the future and most likely without warning.
At the moment the Post Office has no connection fee and no per minute rounding up of call charges so they are useful for calling numbers that persistently answer on to a blank line or have call minder on them. So I no doubt save the 75p because of that, especially on 0845 calls that have problems with the IVR system not working correctly.
Of the WLR providers I honestly think the Post Office is providing the best quality service so they deserve to be supported in principle. Any problems I have with WLR are of the benighted Ofcom's making and not of the Post Office's making. Also by using the WLR service and complaining at high level about the glaring anomalies I put pressure on Ofcom to change the WLR system.
Perhaps now you understand my mission here apart from the Post Office having given me £65 Cashback for which they deserve some loyalty, especially while they refuse to join the herd in adopting connection fees or per minute call charge rounding up.
If they ever bar 18185 then I will leave them to go back to BT the very next day.