Competition is supposed to improve
things for consumers, but sometimes it’s hard to see where competition
helps, when every option seems as blighted with troubles as the next.
Indeed, an overlooked consequence of supplier-hopping in the search for
a better service, is that the last hop, or the next one, can take you
to your very worst service provider yet.
Which is the
case, in fact, when it comes to my Internet. There was a time I used a
small SIM stick that plugged into a router that came from Orange, and
worked perfectly well on a monthly bundle. It had the odd lame moment,
and its unlimited wasn’t unlimited, but firmly capped, so often we mixed
early on data usage and got cut off.
But we could buy
another bundle at any time of day or night. It was easy. Until Orange
decided it was selling the business, and investment and many other
things too seemed to be affected, most notably the proportion of
downtime on our connection.
Finally, in frustration, we
turned to Jamii Telecom, and its offer of fibre to the home. For this,
we copped an installation fee, and paid just a little more than we had
to Orange, but it was fibre! A better experience all round, was our
idea. But this weekend, I learned for the umpteenth time how internal
disorganisation and poor consumer service make for just as lousy a
connection as any row of technical issues.
Last Friday
afternoon, Jamii cut off our connection. It goes sometimes, so we waited
for its return. It didn’t come back, messing up our weekend
increasingly badly. Finally, we called them on their customer line and
they told us we had been cut off for non-payment.
Only
we had paid. They said the bill was due by 25th of the month, and the
last payment had been 20th May. I went off to get the company cheque
book. We gave them the cheque number and the payment date of 13th June
for our monthly subscription, and they said: ‘Sorry, we can’t check this
until Monday when ‘billing’ is back’. So we stayed cut off, for our
non-payment payment error.
Now this is a habit from
JTL. I called our office administrator - our company is connected to
Jamii too - and we went through the number of times their accounts
department has made errors on payment logging and cut us off for
non-payment, and came to the remarkable conclusion that it was on
between 15 per cent and 20 per cent of payments, which is colossal.
But what’s special is that if they ‘lose’ that many
payments in their system, which makes it systemic, their practice of
cutting off without warning, no call, no email, just off, becomes
particularly ridiculous. It can’t be just on these two accounts that
they often ‘lose’ payments, so to cut off on a Friday, knowing they
often get it wrong, and without checking, with no facility to reconnect
until Monday, is what, when it comes to customer service?
I
asked them what compensation we get for this latest cut-off, and no
signs of that, so we just get a Russian Roulette connection hoping they
have registered our payment each new month.
That isn’t
a winner overall, so now we’re looking for another supplier, for both
home and office - because after five false disconnections in not much
over a year on the two accounts, we’re tired of their payment errors and
the disruptions they cause: about which they clearly have zero concern.
And
that’s how lousy customer service causes losses in customer bases and
market share. It’s the unhelpful call line, for sure. It’s the internal
chaos that loses all those inbound payments too. But profoundly, it’s a
cut-off system that has no checks, that doesn’t acknowledge their own
weakness in logging payments, and cuts off without query or warning,
leaving the burden on the customer to clear up the mess and prove they
paid.
Now that’s when competition is worth exploring.
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