SilentCallsVictim wrote on Aug 4
th, 2009 at 10:28am:
Has ownership / rental of the alternative number been offered to the Department of Health at a reasonable commercial rate, or is somone profiteering from its failure to setup a proper number for those who are unable to use the 0800 number without incurring a premium charge?
Is this a suggestion that the Department of Health might wish to pay QX Telecom to 'rent' or 'own' this service (the 01635 number) when QX itself operates this number at, one assumes, a profit? This would seem to me to be, by definition, encouraging profiteering at the taxpayer's expense.
Or is it a suggestion that the provider might like to share some of its profits from calls to the number with the DH in return for the wider publication of the number and hence more calls to it? Remember that the DH incurs extra charges for receiving calls on the 0800 number, so any revenue it would get is coming from its own budget anyway.
This leaves two other possibilities:
1. The DH pay QX Telecom to point this number directly to the DH's "digital line", assuming that the system is setup in this way and assuming that there is no "termination charge" for connecting in this way.
2. The DH requests that the provider it uses to provide the 0800 number (probably BT) sets up a 01/02/03 number to run in parallel with it.
The 01635 number service itself, provided by a third party, is just what I term a "secondary origination" service. That is, in simple terms, its provider receives the call and puts another call out to the 0800 number (originates a second call). It is the surcharge made by some operators for 0800 calls that makes it worthwhile callers to call via the 01635 number.
In effect, the 01635 number reduces the level of that surcharge and in so doing shares part of what's left with another provider.
There are different classes of alternatives. The best are those which are provided by the organisations themselves. For example, the AA has published geographical numbers for member services and breakdown callouts. These answer with the same IVR as their respective 08 NGNs, and as they are provided by the AA, it is far less likely that they may be disabled at any time, even if it stops promoting them.
So if the DH was to release an 01/02/03 alternative, then this would replace the 01635 from QX Telecom in the SAYNOTO0870.COM database. In so doing it would save the DH the cost of receiving calls on the 0800 number for calls originated to the 01635 alternative.
Clearly, there is no guarantee from the DH that the 01635 numbers will remain. So all in all, the ball is in the DH's court to provide a 01/02/03 alternative.