Has anyone had a letter through the post to say your monthly bill has gone up?
Surely they cant do this out of the blue? I agreed to pay a set monthly fee over 2 years and no more...
Is it worth a moan? Or do i just accept it?
My colleague rang up querying it because he went on the website and noticed a new customer could take a new contract with more rewards for less money.. They then transferred him onto that contract maintaining his current term. So he now gets more for less money.
You don't ask, you don't get.
Prices go up, it's called inflation, deal with it and if you don't like it cancel your contract, and if you get a massive charge for cancelling before the contract end-date then read terms & conditions before you take out any future contracts.
IMO
should they not account for inflation and any other external factors before they give you a price, with the worsening economy many of us have less disposable income, does that mean we can reduce what we pay? Yes it's all in the terms and conditions but who actually reads them?
Its like 80p-£1 not double in price.
should they not account for inflation and any other external factors before they give you a price, with the worsening economy many of us have less disposable income, does that mean we can reduce what we pay? Yes it's all in the terms and conditions but who actually reads them?
Is inflation a new idea to them?
When would you suggest they do it then................
No I think its poor too.
Maybe if they hadn't of wasted millions on Kevin Bacon we wouldn't have to pay this extra "£1" to pay for his "services".
I think its just the principle.
I sign upto to a contract for xx amount per month for and expect to pay that for the duration of my contract. Personally my contract has gone up since taking it out 2 years ago and thats not on. I've never had a phone contract increase in all my years of owning a phone its always been 20-25 or 30 per month and thats all i've paid for the duration of the contract. I am aware its "just £3" that bills might increase but if I saw a contract that was £30 or one that was £33 I know which one I would go for.
No I think its poor too.
I sign upto to a contract for xx amount per month for and expect to pay that for the duration of my contract. Personally my contract has gone up since taking it out 2 years ago and thats not on. I've never had a phone contract increase in all my years of owning a phone its always been 20-25 or 30 per month and thats all i've paid for the duration of the contract. I am aware its "just £3" that bills might increase but if I saw a contract that was £30 or one that was £33 I know which one I would go for.
So if you just kept this contract rolling, for say 10 years and just bought handsets and kept the deal going, how would they increase the price to reflect inflation?
So if you just kept this contract rolling, for say 10 years and just bought handsets and kept the deal going, how would they increase the price to reflect inflation?
Haven't they all had to just invest a large lump into 4G?
Yes, but there prices over all their contracts will be supporting it. Did you think they spent the millions they did on the 4G network through projected figures of the 4G contracts? It has to come from everywhere.
It's because of inflation, so going by their word, this increase is to simply cover that.
My comment was referring to the fact that they won't 'have paid off all their operating hardware'. I've worked in finance in a huge company pal (Roll's Royce, where we regularly had £60m projects being started etc), I know how it works. They don't just put huge saving pots towards future projects, it's all budgeting, forecasting and projected figures. Not only that, they still have increasing rent rates, utilities, wages etc, etc, etc, which are going up with inflation, just like the contracts.
Prices often change within small margins and are always accepted. Unless part A suddenly went from say, £10,000 to £20,000, then it would generally be accepted.
Even prices on longstanding contracts (parts needed to build parts on an ongoing basis), they go up marginally with inflation, cost increases etc, and are accepted unless they are going up by silly %'s each year.
So if you just kept this contract rolling, for say 10 years and just bought handsets and kept the deal going, how would they increase the price to reflect inflation?
What phone have you got?