Hi again, please tell me what you think about toll-free service numbers? I mean here in Germany about 90% of all companies advertise their products and service through hotlines the customers have to pay for. Some of the German companies use this strategy in such a clever way that they make their customers pay for their bad service. Here is an example: I have finally managed to get rid of the all-mighty T-Com (the German equivalent to BT). This means, I use my TV cable to make phone calls and access the internet. Today my cable connection was dead (neither the phone, the TV nor the internet worked).
The company (KabelDeutschland) offers a hotline that costs 12 cents per minute. I called the number and had to listen to a various advertisements until the computer voice mentioned that if you want to report an outage you have to dial another number. The voice blurted out the number so fast that it was impossible for me to memorize it let alone write it down.
Funnily enough I could have left a message but I was not sure if anybody would ever have listened to it so why bother? So in order to report a problem this German companies makes you listen to their adverts, pay for that phone call and phone up again if you want to scribble down the number you need to call. Why is that? Why can’t they offer a toll-free servicer number?
We once discussed this question at university and one of our profs suggested that this is probably because companies that are offering toll-free numbers would be receiving too many phone calls from crazy people who were bothering the call center agents with their personal problems. I don’t think this is the case. As far as I know most companies in the UK and the US offer toll-free service numbers to their customers. Why is this not possible in Germany? What about the companies in your country? Do they offer you toll-free numbers?
I’d be interested to read your comments on this.
Cheers
Frank