Our love-hate relationship with cell phones
Americans need to be connected but are annoyed with the service providers
In the last three years, more people complained to the Better Business Bureau about cell phone companies than any other industry — and the bureau tracks more than 3,800 industries!
Unhappy customers are annoyed by dropped calls, static, and poor coverage. They’re frustrated with billing errors that often seem impossible to resolve and customer service representatives who can’t help or don’t seem to care.
Consumer Reports says cell service is one of the lower-rated services it surveys. It’s been that way for the past six years.
For its annual report on cell phone service, published in the January 2008 issue, the magazine surveyed 47,000 readers. Fewer than half of the respondents were completely or very satisfied. Based on this feedback, the editors conclude that cell phone service “seems to stubbornly resist improvement.”
As you might imagine, the wireless industry hears things differently. Joe Ferran, a spokesman for CTIA — The Wireless Association, says you’d get more favorable results if you surveyed the general public and not readers of a specific publication.
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CTIA’s Joe Farren says customer service is something carriers are always trying to improve. “In a competitive marketplace that has to be fixed or you’re going to have a problem,” he says. The question is, how long will it take the industry to fix its customer service problems?
But wait, there is some good news!
Wireless companies have spent billions of dollars the last few years to upgrade their networks. That investment is starting to pay off – fewer dead spots, fewer dropped calls, and less static.
“We do see improvement,” says J.D. Power’s Kirk Parsons. “It’s going in the right direction, but we still have a long way to go.”
The industry is also becoming more customer-friendly. The big companies just started to prorate their $150 to $200 early-termination fees. These steep penalties have kept many unhappy customers from switching to a competitor.
The major carriers have also announced they will stop forcing customers to extend their contract for two years just because they make a change to their service plan. These mandatory contract extensions were one of the top two complaints in the Consumer Reports survey, tied with the high cost of cell service.
And more change is on the way. Last month, Verizon Wireless promised to allow “open-access” to its network by the end of 2008. This means customers will not be forced to buy their phones from Verizon. They’ll be able to use any phone that is compatible with the Verizon Wireless network. AT&T already offers a wide open network. Sprint Nextel will launch one next year.
Why is the industry removing these strong arm tactics? Consumer Reports says they were pressured into doing it by a constant stream of lawsuits filed by consumer groups and state governments.
The Wireless Association says the industry is not reacting to lawsuits; it’s listening to the marketplace. “The customer is making his or her demands very clear and the carriers are responding,” says spokesman Joe Farren.
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