Ian G wrote on Dec 24
th, 2013 at 11:33am:
Once DWP have made the change, joining HMRC in their use of 03 numbers, more than 90% of all calls to government departments will be on 03 numbers. A year ago, it was probably less than 2%.
Where do you get your figures from. I don't believe any of the figures above. Please quote your sources and please provide an encyclopaedic data set.
Where were you in the many previous years that we were responding to Ofcom and ICSTIS and other consulations and being ignored. Probably working in some cosy well paid governmental job not worrying at all about telecoms costs I would suspect.
You strongly sound to me like some government civil servant tasked with working on this project to change to 03 who are now afraid that we may rain on your parade in claiming near 100% success by government in sweeping aside this menace to the public whilst ignoring the fact that it was the government and its cronies that introduced the whole rotten system of 084/7 call centres to begin with. Your assertion this was not Ofcom's issue to deal with is also ridiculous in view of the numerous previous consultations they launched on the issue and then failed to act on.
Why do you not expect me to be cynical when Ofcom firmly announced the 070 number range would move to 06 and then changed their minds at the last minute when a few powerful govrnment interested connected with expensive hospital bedside telephone services got at them.
Why do you have so much faith in BIS when all that is happening is that government is trying to take credit for being forced in to doing something it should have done 10 years ago that it is only bothering to act on now due to an EU Directive.
03 numbers were more or less my personal suggestion to Ofcom and the only personal success I have had with this body. But they destroyed the purity of the idea by allowing underlying wholesale charges to 03 numbers that were different from geographic numbers making most of the industry reluctant to take them up.
Quote:Numerous other departments will be making the switch in the coming months. The figure not ever reach 100%, but it won't be far off.
How do you know? Are you a senior government civil servant tasked with dealing with the matter? Either way goverment and its regulatory agencies OFTEL and then Ofcom should never have allowed 084/7 numbers to exist and spread like a cancer in the first place. And the lousy British Government would never have done anything about this European wide plague (also at work everywhere in Spain) had it not been forced on them by the EU.
And why do you think the problem is now at an end? Surely you must realise that an already disturbing tendency for many organisations to only offer contact via online web forms that are not responded to for days or weeks will now simply spread ever wider, with no restriction on it doing so. And surely you must realise that there are numerous activities the public need to call organisations for not deemed as customer services that will still have 084/7 numbers.
But you seem desperate to force us to declare that the war has been won and so to take our eye off the many dodgy conscience less people in positions of power in large organisations who all agreed to these numbers in the first place.
Quote:John Lewis obviously made a mistake
Please don't give me the old "poor old John Lewis" must not have realised what they were doing baloney when the adverse consequences of using 0844 numbers were known perfectly well and had already received massive and extensive publicity at the time they chose to move to them (they had also already had many years of customers writing to them complaining about the 084 numbers used for johnlewis.com). The truth is that they just thought it would be profitable to change to 0844 and that their poor old customers would not have a choice as they were already captive. These things happen time and again because people without a conscience, who only care about their own bonuses, are now in charge of most organisations. The authority on which I was a councillor were never able to bring in 084/7 numbers as I passed a resolution preventing them doing so back in 2004. Subsequently they introduced a large and extremely faceless centralised customer services department with long call queues but they had to keep it on the original geograpic number due to my proactive resolution before I left the Council.
Quote:the snowball is going to be unstoppable.
What planet do you live on exactly? The BBC and several Police forces and councils changed to 03 numbers several years ago but other organisations and government agencies simply ignored this.
Quote:However, now you have moved to Spain, I don't see why any of this should be of interest to you any more.
I haven't moved to Spain. I merely spend a number of weeks a year there. However the Europe wide telco ripoff movement in the form of 902 numbers is very much alive and well in that country.
At least people know who I am as I have been posting on this forum for nearly 10 years. You on the other have just sprung up from nowhere, have not explained who you are or what you do and yet constantly declare yourself an expert with your own unique insight in to what the future holds. Tell us who you are + why you see yourself as qualified to lecture on this subject and we might take you a little more seriously.