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NewsSurvey Results are in on Telco's
Survey Results are in on Telco's

Survey Results are in on Telco's

The telecommunications business is fiercely competitive. The major telcos have massive advertising and sponsorship budgets and most have content streaming arrangements in place also but they make their money from your monthly phone bill.

Our current Fiftyup Telco survey reflects what our members have been telling us for some time:

  • 74% of FiftyUps still have a landline
  • 72% of respondents have changed providers before
  • 21% say the most annoying thing about telcos is "The difficulty in finding someone to talk to when I have a problem".

When asked ”What is most important to you in a phone or internet provider”, having an Australian-based call centre was highest at 30%.

Off-shore call centres remain a real sore point: I’m going out on a limb to tell you why.

Australian companies have been outsourcing call centre jobs to India, Malaysia and the Phillipines for a while now and these call centre employees usually have a rather good level of English. However rather good isn’t good enough! The last thing customers want is to struggle with basic communication when they are trying to get a problem solved.

When I discussed this with friends recently, many admitted to hanging up if they hear a foreign accent when the representative answers.

We are not being racist, we are just looking for a quick solution to our problem. A strong foreign accent will make the communication harder, especially over the phone when voice is the only thing you can rely on. Phone communication can even be challenging between people from the same country! When you then add in some over 50’s who may be hard-of-hearing, is it any wonder there is a problem.

As consumers, we’re not stupid. We know the only reason businesses use an offshore call centre is to save money. It’s like saying to us “your question is probably not so hard to answer, our Australian-based staff are too busy to deal with your problem”. I know that’s a little harsh but that’s how most customers feel and it makes them angry.

A lot of offshore call centres rely on scripted conversations or “cue cards” to make sure their agents have the proper vocabulary and knowledge to answer customers. There is nothing more frustrating than someone giving you irrelevant scripted answers.

Don’t think that reading a script is enjoyable for the employee on the other hand of the phone either. It is unnatural and automatically builds a wall between the two people speaking. It makes employees feel like robots which results in them turning off empathy and emotions, two vital aspects of any conversation.

A Roy Morgan study* out last year showed that 22% of Australians (14+) think they’re all the same.

Michele Levine, CEO, Roy Morgan Research, says:

Perhaps it’s counterintuitive, but around one in four customers who are dissatisfied and/or intend to switch provider in the next year think all telcos are the same—that’s actually more likely than the norm. So how will these customers choose their next provider? Are they seeking a point of difference (perhaps something new they don’t know they want yet) or, all telcos being equal in terms, will it just come down to price?Our current Fiftyup Telco Quiz is reflecting what our members have been telling us for some time. When asked ”What is most important to you in a phone or internet provider”, having an Australian-based call centre was highest at 30%. 

What would make you change telco providers? Tell us in the forum below your experience with your telco?

 

Originally posted on .

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Survey Results are in on Telco's

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Neil
Neil from QLD commented:

The overseas call centre people do their best. A lot of the time that isn't good enough.Reading from a script isn't the same as listening to the real problem. 

John
John from NSW commented:

Very happy with DoDo and Amysim. 

martin
martin from QLD commented:

I'd love to change to a different Telco. With Internet/phone I'd like to change to Telstra or TPG, but one is too expensive, and the other one cannot supply on the Gold Coast due to us being in a Telstra Velocity Estate that is not serviced by anyone else. With mobile, I would really like to remove the Telco that rhymes with vodafail, as their service is not even reliable or available on Mt Tamborine - that overlooks the Gold Coast! Again, Telstra is far to expensive for some that uses their mobile for maybe two calls a month! 

Thomas
Thomas from QLD commented:

I loath the number of times I hear "We are so sorry about that" and the fact one has to ask for repeats owing to an accent I have trouble deciphering. The false greetings and departures. I also have hung up when hearing the accent, because I am aware of the complications. 

Cate
Cate from NSW commented:

My recent couple of experiences with call centres in the Philippines has been less that ideal. Apart from the unfathomable accents and speaking at 100 miles per hour, on both occasions they have been very pushy to the point of rudeness. I finally settled on 'Belong' for my internet connection and was able to organise the entire deal with an Australian person. How refreshing not to have to ask them to repeat everything they say. 

Bruce
Bruce from QLD commented:

When it comes to 'fixed' services we are reasonably well served but must admit we have not needed to contact call centres very often. Our problems are, as grey nomads, is the pathetic mobile coverage once away from major cities. It really only Telstra, or other Telco's using the Telstra network. We have been using BOOST and found it good but call centre/customer service is 'not so good'. Time to level the playing field by having the 'cherry pickers' share Telstra's Community Service Obligation in the not so profitable regions. They should be compelled to provide access to all areas of Australia or may be a license levy to cover the areas they don't/won't service. It is no wonder Telstra is more expensive. 

Karl
Karl from NSW commented:

Cheaper bills . Local call centre for local customers . 

Gertraud
Gertraud from ACT commented:

When I moved into my current home, the first Canberra suburb with fiber to the home broadband, I had a choice of TransACT or TransACT (now iinet) as my provider. I stayed with iinet when the original broadband was changed over to NBN, but am considering to switch over to Telstra when the current contract expires. For my mobile there is no other provider than Telstra I would ever consider. 

ian
ian from NSW commented:

try jenee mobile based in parramatta nsw. (they use the optus network ) .. you always get to talk to an aussie ,and they have great deals....ian nsw 

Bernard
Bernard from QLD commented:

Telcos are like Banks. There are so few good ones, and they are so much alike in their business practices, they don't really care about customer satisfaction. They have adopted the belief that customers are easy to replace. 

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