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Q&A ON THE CHANGES
I think it will be helpful to explain revenue sharing and what will happen for those telephone providers, like Virgin Media, that choose to retail calls to 0870 numbers at higher rates than geographical (01/02) calls following the changes. They will be the ones ripping off consumers rather than banks and insurance companies, as it is at the moment.
What is a revenue sharing number?Use of a revenue sharing number allows an organisation to take a share of the call charges, either directly in cash and/or offset against the cost of other telephony services. In both cases, the organisation receiving the call is charging the caller directly for use of the service.
What types of number are revenue sharing?Up until 1 August, 0870 is a revenue sharing range. Others are 0844, 0845 and 0871. The exact same principle that underlies these numbers functions on "premium rate service" numbers starting 09; just to allow the call recipient to impose a greater charge on the caller.
What is happening on 1 August? Is Ofcom simply banning revenue sharing on 0870?From a practical point of view, the changes that Ofcom is making will almost certainly result in the ceasation of revenue sharing. It is the framework which facilitates revenue sharing that is being removed and it is this which is the real bone of contention and reason for saying no to 0870.
What is the framework that facilitates the revenue sharing process and how is it being changed on 1 August?To answer this, it is necessary to understand how a telephone call is connected from caller to receiver and the way in which call charges a divided up. I present an example to illustrate the point:
Let us consider a telephone call where calling and receiving parties are with different telephone companies. The caller is with BT and the person they are calling has a Virgin Media telephone line. BT takes the call from its customer and carries it along its wires (network) until it gets to a point where it inter-connects with Virgin Media. The call is then carried by Virgin Media's network to its customer who is the destination party in this example.
Virgin Media imposes a charge on BT for connecting this call to its customer. With a revenue sharing call, such as 0870 (prior to 1 August), this wholesale inter-operator "termination charge" is far greater than had the call been made to a normal geographical number. Such a circumstance would allow Virgin Media to "revenue share" with its customer.
The changes will see the termination charges for 0870 brought right down. The reduction in this "wholesale" burden on call retailers, such as BT in this example, will be such that they will be able to include these type of calls in packages and at the same rate as geographical destinations.
This is akin to a manufacturer lowering the amount it charges for a particular product. Such a move will allow the reduction to be passed through the supply chain and/or absorbed by it.
Come 1 August, some telephone companies, including Virgin Media, have chosen to retail 0870 calls at higher rates than geographical (01/02) numbers. Does this mean that revenue sharing is continuing in such cases?No. If some telephone call providers choose to charge more, then the extra call revenue is going into their pocket, rather than being collected and passed on for the benefit of the organisations receiving calls, as is the case at present.
Companies such as Virgin Media have chosen not to pass on the savings, instead retaining them as additional profit. So in real terms, this amounts to a price increase.
Note that in this question and answer I am referring to Virgin Media in its capacity as the caller's telephone company rather than, as in the previous question, the receiver's telco.