On 12/01/12 21:20, MB wrote:
> On 12/01/2012 20:42, Woody wrote:
>> "MB"<M...@nospam.nospam> wrote in message
>> news:ZZadndlkVP_UnJLS...@bt.com...
>>> What really annoys them most is that when they ring to report
>>> it Vodafone blame on their phones, SIM card and anything rather
>>> than admit there is a fault though some people have been given
>>> free Sure Signals.
>>>
>>> Are the customer service people given access to any information
>>> on network faults or are they programmed to initially blame the
>>> customer's equipment. Reminiscent of BT broadband!
I've had problems in the past that are clearly nothing to do with my
handset, SIM card or anything else within my control, and had trouble
getting past mobile phone networks' procedures to get the matter dealt
with...
>> It does help if you are able to give them the numbers of more
>> than one person who is having the same problem!
In my case one of the worst was a number that could net be reached from
my O2 phone, nor from the BT phone where I was (not far from
Birmingham), though it was reachable from Livingston - the destination
was in Southend-on-Sea. The fact that it would not work from a BT line
in the same area was dismissed as "irrelevant" by O2. I had effectively
proved that the problem was somewhere within the telephone network
generally, but O2 would not touch it. (BT, by the way, had me in an
offline queue for 45 minutes - 5 minutes longer than the fault
persisted.) Ability to call a number that is working is what I think of
as their core service and I was not keen on being messed around. Being
in the industry, I really did know better than they did, but it didn't
count for anything.
> As I mentioned it is like when there is a BT broadband fault. I get
> confirmation that others have lost their broadband, try a spare router
> and a second computer but the BT muppets still want me to reset my
> router and go through a pointless series of tests that take about an
> hour. When there wasa fault at the beginning of the year the network
> people were not even aware that a large area had lost broadband because
> the information did not seem to be passed to them. It sounds as if
> Vodafone customer service are as bad.
Never had this difficulty with Vodafone yet, but it wouldn't surprise
me. They were however swiftly able to confirm some cell failures in
London E14 when I reported poor service in part of the area. I would
take out a contract with the first mobile phone network to allow me all
the services I currently have plus customer service with the right to
insist on bypassing certain steps - but it seems it is not likely to be
taken seriously, just like the issue of not being able to network-side
block withheld number calls.
> Unfortunately it is not unusual for customer service departments to
> operate in this way. I have had a few times where I have reported a
> fault to the BBC then weeks later been told that there was no fault even
> though others also lost the service.
Ah - that happened to me too - "no, there can't be anything wrong with
BBC2 on Sutton Coldfield - we'd be getting lots of calls if there was" -
I insisted that they probably would and that mine was merely the first.
A fault was actually confirmed on air that evening - and in fixing it
the picture vanished several times and the sound changed to that of one
of the commercial channels.
--
Phil Reynolds
mail:
phil...@tinsleyviaduct.com
Followups to NEWS please, that's what it's there for.