gerryambler wrote on Nov 3
rd, 2009 at 9:28am:
Thanks Dave, but I'm afraid this number does not get me the Claims Dept. It goes to their Sales Dept. who claim not to be able to put me through [because they are in another department --doh!]; all they do is to quote me the 0845 2932570 number -- which is very one I'm trying to find an alternative [NG] number for.
Thanks for that. I've listed the 01282 779086 number in the database as an alternative for 0800 169 7880 with a note to say that it is for sales only. These two numbers are answered identically as I've just tried them.
Let's look at what we have:
01282 779086 Sales voice
01282 778368 Sales fax
01282 772125 Claims fax
I'm looking for a common prefix and there isn't one. It looks like the numbers into this office have nothing in common and therefore at present there is little hope of working out what the 01282 claims number is.
The building they're in looks to be quite large and the way that there is a large Warranty Wise sign on the front suggests that they are the only occupier:
gerryambler wrote on Nov 3
rd, 2009 at 9:28am:
P.S. Does the company (s) get a rake-off for this type of number -- in the same way that I understand they do for the 0870 etc. numbers ??
The rules for 0870 numbers changed on 1 August. The subsidy (premium) on 0870 calls has now been removed. Some providers like BT have responded by bringing 0870 call rates inline with 01/02/03 ones. Some like Virgin Media and the mobile companies have decided not to pass on savings to their customers.
The use of any type of revenue sharing number benefits the user, whether they receive revenue directly or not.
gerryambler wrote on Nov 3
rd, 2009 at 9:28am:
I appreciate that the companies are offering 'local-number call rates' but I [like many others, I suspect] pay for an all-in telephone package that excludes NG numbers. And, yes I know that it is our telephone service providers that we should be getting at [but wouldn't this make the SAYNO.. site redundant?].
The cost of calls to 0844/0845 numbers is not the fault of the telephone companies we make our calls with. They are only retailing the calls. It is the call recipient's telephone provider that is charging our (i.e. the caller's) telephone provider more. The amount they charge is down to the number prefix chosen by their customer, the company we are calling.
Including revenue sharing numbers in packages or lowering their retail call rate does nothing to alleviate the problem. The telephone companies we make our calls with still incur the higher charges, and therefore pass them on to consumers in general.