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Vodafone: Making the most of now(t)

So SMS Text News reader Funda has fallen through the cracks with Vodafone’s Customer Services.

She’s going nuts. As well all do, don’t we? I do.

Have a read of her slightly challenging experience:

– – – – –

Being a mobile enthusiast and very much into my gadgets and technology in general, I often read articles talking about customer churn being one of the biggest challenges faced by mobile operators today…but apparently not Vodafone (well regarding myself at least).

I’ve been a customer (a loyal one at that) with Vodafone for around six years now and have never been tempted to switch to any other operators, despite attractive offerings such as the promise of a shiny new iPhone or a much more attractive contract from 3 UK. The fact is I am one of those customers that happily call up Vodafone at the end of my contract and sign-up for another 18 months.

That though is now all part of the past!

Like most of you, I have a monthly direct debit setup which ensures that I never miss or in fact worry about a single bill.

However, in early May I received a bill from Vodafone stating a due balance of over £200. Even for someone like me who loves chatting and texting, this seemed way too high to be possible and so the drama unfolds.

Upon calling customer services I am informed that my balance is a result of me not paying my bills between February and May. In the same breath I’m being told that the reason for this seems to be that my direct debit was canceled. Strange, I thought, as I wondered why after six years I would suddenly decide after 6 years to go rogue.

We proceed to discuss back and forth and Vodafone insists that it may be my bank which took the step to cancel my direct debit. Ok, so I’ve been with my bank for over eight years and this has never happened before.

I proceed to talk to my bank which guarantees me that the cancellation of the direct debit was carried out by Vodafone – I am given a reference number as well as a date for the cancellation.

A call back to Vodafone customer services armed with my bank’s reference and a few clicks on their mouse and I am told:

“We’re very sorry; it does seem to be a billing error on our part. It turns out that your bills between February and May have been billed to someone called Mrs Jones.” Apparently a distressed Mrs Jones had called a few days earlier after noticing her bills had shot up quite dramatically. Yes of course, she’s been paying my bills too!

I thought to myself – poor Mrs Jones whilst imagining an old lady who only uses her phone in an emergency. This is of course something that could happen – technology fails sometimes, right? So I ask for a resolution.

The options are simple: pay off the balance.

I protest and say that if I had £200 a month to spend on a mobile phone bill, why on earth would I be on a £40/month contract? I am passed around like an unwanted package until one department suggests setting up a payment plan spread over a few months. I’m fine with that. We work out a plan and I am told I will receive a new balance statement in the post.

A month later and still no written communication from Vodafone and my phone line is suspended, cut off, just like that. I call customer services and they explain that I haven’t paid my balance and therefore the service is now suspended. I explain the situation, we work out yet another payment plan and my suspension is lifted.

Guess what happened to me today, exactly one month later. Correct, I got cut off again.

Now I was really angry. I called customer services and having spoken to at least four agents, I’m back at square one. The payment plan and instalments have once again changed, the sums we are talking about have nothing to do with the ones I was quoted a month ago or even by the first customer agent I spoke to. I request a letter or email outlining my new payment plan and I’m then told that ‘this is not something Vodafone does’.

By this point I am really angry. I understand the challenges of telecoms billing but I cannot understand why I am being refused written information about balances I owe. I only want an e-mail and I can hear him clicking away on his mouse whilst he is talking to me.

I’m furious and a very unhappy customer to say the least.

I’m ready to leave Vodafone, after six years, and inform the agent this is my intention and to tell me the figure I will be left outstanding. I brace my self for a small fortune.

The reply? “I’m sorry; we don’t deal with cancellations in this department. You’ll have to call back into customer services.”

Does that sounds like the voice of a company that cares about customer churn? Not to me. Meanwhile, I still have an outstanding balance of course, and I am tied to this contract (on paper) until April 09. Back to billing. So one of the solutions I’m presented with is:

“If we suspend the service for three months we could use that time to get our billing system to simplify the payment plan and sort this out for you.” During this suspension I would of course not be able to use my phone, but was also surprised to still be paying my line rental. I can’t live without my phone, yet alone not have a phone and throw £40 a month away just to make Vodafone’s customer agent’s life a little easier.

I give up. I pay my outstanding balance for this month (and April) and start to dread the inevitable case of deja vous I will encounter this day next month.

Do you think if I click my heels three times and say “theres no place like Vodafone” I will wake up from this nightmare?

– – – – –

Well Funda, I think all you need to do is click your heels three times and say the words ‘Forum Intervention Team’.

I feel like Jim’ll Fix It 😉

I talked to Gareth at Vodafone’s Forum Intervention Team. He and his colleagues are looking into the issue right now and will, I’ve no doubt, demonstrate to you why you should keep your Voda account. They’re an attentive crowd and usually ultra quick. Keep us updated, Funda?

14 COMMENTS

  1. I had an identical issue with Vodafone a few years ago on a datacard I got from them… I could tellbit wasn't my data they were billing me for because A) I used my company orange SIM in the card and B) the data usage was at stupid times like 7am

    In the end I just told them where to install their datacard and never heard a peep from them since.

  2. Good Afternoon Ladies and Gents,

    What a nightmare! Simply not good enough. I've spoken to Funda about this and I'm hoping we've found a suitable solution, but I shan't say any more for now.

    As for Jim'll Fix It, I never pictured you as a shellsuit, medallion and big cigar kind of guy Ewan 😆

    Have a nice day everyone,

    Tom

    Vodafone UK

  3. I don't think situations like this are isolated to just Vodafone. I signed up my girlfriend and her sister to the same 18-month deal I got on Orange and they had so many problems because they ordered from the same home address on the same day. They had completely confused the two accounts, would not talk to them because they were supposedly calling from the other's phone and also made a mysterious third account. Then my girlfriend was being billed twice for both of the phones. They as usual pass you around all the different departments and people who are rude, unhelpful and unwilling to take responsibility – we even got hung up on. Having to call back and go through the maze of key presses is a ridiculous situation in this modern day and age. You should be able to be internally put through to who you need to talk to.

    This situation is just symptomatic of cost cutting on customer services. Companies are just mindless. I've been with Orange 8 years and they've never given me squat. They'll lie to you, try to tell you you don't have any rights and attempt to sign you up to more long-term contracts that you don't need. The phones they sold to my girlfriend and her sister malfunctioned at the firmware level after less than 6-months, we reported it slightly after that and they wouldn't accept fault and said they could replace it if we signed up to Orange Care insurance… simply breaking the law in this manner and not being clear with your customers is unacceptable. I sympathise with your situation.

  4. Not even half an hour went by and I had a call from the Forum intervention team who was very eager to listen,- not only listen but appreciate the challenge and more importantly offer some concrete and acceptable solutions. The result? A detailed overview (via e-mail) on all payments received, where things went wrong and an account which is now back up-to-date – finally. But most importantly: a still very loyal Vodafone customer today and hopefully for the foreseeable future. Thank you!

  5. That's great that Vodafone has this Forum Intervention Team to step in and sort out individual problems — but is anything done to sort out the underlying customer service issues that cause these problems? Why does it take the FIT to sort them out in this way, why couldn't one of the army of CSRs Funda spoke to solve it?

  6. I don't think situations like this are isolated to just Vodafone. I signed up my girlfriend and her sister to the same 18-month deal I got on Orange and they had so many problems because they ordered from the same home address on the same day. They had completely confused the two accounts, would not talk to them because they were supposedly calling from the other's phone and also made a mysterious third account. Then my girlfriend was being billed twice for both of the phones. They as usual pass you around all the different departments and people who are rude, unhelpful and unwilling to take responsibility – we even got hung up on. Having to call back and go through the maze of key presses is a ridiculous situation in this modern day and age. You should be able to be internally put through to who you need to talk to.

    This situation is just symptomatic of cost cutting on customer services. Companies are just mindless. I've been with Orange 8 years and they've never given me squat. They'll lie to you, try to tell you you don't have any rights and attempt to sign you up to more long-term contracts that you don't need. The phones they sold to my girlfriend and her sister malfunctioned at the firmware level after less than 6-months, we reported it slightly after that and they wouldn't accept fault and said they could replace it if we signed up to Orange Care insurance… simply breaking the law in this manner and not being clear with your customers is unacceptable. I sympathise with your situation.

  7. Not even half an hour went by and I had a call from the Forum intervention team who was very eager to listen,- not only listen but appreciate the challenge and more importantly offer some concrete and acceptable solutions. The result? A detailed overview (via e-mail) on all payments received, where things went wrong and an account which is now back up-to-date – finally. But most importantly: a still very loyal Vodafone customer today and hopefully for the foreseeable future. Thank you!

  8. That's great that Vodafone has this Forum Intervention Team to step in and sort out individual problems — but is anything done to sort out the underlying customer service issues that cause these problems? Why does it take the FIT to sort them out in this way, why couldn't one of the army of CSRs Funda spoke to solve it?

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