cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

02. Price Rise. Inability to explain. Spelling.

Anonymous
Not applicable
Well, after complaining to 02 regarding the recent price rise I received an e-mail which ended with the following: "We trust this provides you with an adequate explanation our decision."
It also contained the word price spelt as prise and intio instead of into.
And I pay these people?
Not surprisingly, I have complained again. Maybe I will receive another e-mail with spelling mistakes.
Message 1 of 38
4,235 Views
37 REPLIES 37

Anonymous
Not applicable

I agree, but I save money in the long run. 02 as a company have the opposite effect on my pocket.  I don't know what business plan 02 have, but being a competitive company does not seem to be priority to them. People will vote with their money, and inevitably success of one company could well be the demise of another.

Message 31 of 38
1,784 Views

Anonymous
Not applicable
@Anonymous

Please let us know how you find giffgaff.

Can I ask how much your monthly contract was going up by to warrant moving Networks ?
Message 32 of 38
1,780 Views

Anonymous
Not applicable

giffgaff.co.uk

 

My contract was increasing by £1+

 

Thank you for link correction.

 

 

Message 33 of 38
1,776 Views

MI5
Level 94: Supreme
  • 152478 Posts
  • 651 Topics
  • 29104 Solutions
Registered:
www.giffgaff.com
I have no affiliation whatsoever with O2 or any subsidiary companies. Comments posted are entirely of my own opinion. This is not Customer Service so we are unable to help with account specific issues.
Please select the post that helped you best and mark as the solution. This helps other members in resolving their issues faster. Thank you.
Message 34 of 38
1,773 Views

a_hcir
Level 5: Ponderer
  • 133 Posts
  • 17 Topics
  • 0 Solutions
Registered:

@adamtemp64 wrote:

Read the facts not the fiction the like of the press and Which have created


Here are the facts:

 

1. o2 hide a bit in the small print stating they can up the prices by the outdated RPI statistics every 12 months.  Makes sure not to draw attention to this at the point of sale, because people will probably say "no way, jose!"

2. o2 decide to delay their price hike annoucement until the very day that Ofcom's guidelines say "Hey, we don't think in-contract price hikes are fair."

3. Angry villagers descend upon the o2 forums with pitchforks and flaming torches looking to dole out justice

 

Now, to be fair, life would be a lot smoother if ofcom had some cajones and said "Oi, networks, if you increase a price mid-contract even by a penny we'll come and urinate on your flower beds and allow punters to terminate their contracts", but they didn't.  But that doesn't mean what o2 did is right, either.  Tax avoidance isn't illegal, but it's not right to avoid it if you can afford it, you dig?

Message 35 of 38
1,760 Views

adamtemp64
Level 66: Unequalled
  • 16458 Posts
  • 313 Topics
  • 1316 Solutions
Registered:

I leave you to your own conclusions .

 

Good bye

iPhone 11 Pro 256gb on unlimited data
iPad Pro 12.9” 2020 256gb refresh o2 family discount
Apple Watch series 4
My first mobile was in 1995 a CM-R111 from sony on Cellnet.
Wincanton South Somerset (Full 4g 3G 2g indoor coverage) Remember we are all customers here not customer services

Message 36 of 38
1,754 Views

Anonymous
Not applicable

I guess it comes down to preference, there is always some risk when taking out contracts, anything that ties you financially to it for 24 months should be scrutinised. But no matter how much scrutiny you use, there is no way of preventing any company from raising (hiking) their prices once they have you legally bound to them. PAYG could be the best option, you control how much you spend, and it doesn't involve tying yourself into something that dictates cost and longevity.

Message 37 of 38
1,682 Views

Anonymous
Not applicable

@Anonymous wrote:

I guess it comes down to preference, there is always some risk when taking out contracts, anything that ties you financially to it for 24 months should be scrutinised. But no matter how much scrutiny you use, there is no way of preventing any company from raising (hiking) their prices once they have you legally bound to them. PAYG could be the best option, you control how much you spend, and it doesn't involve tying yourself into something that dictates cost and longevity.


Which is what I choose to do.

 

Saying that I then have to pay full for my iPhone but again thats a matter of choice too.

Message 38 of 38
1,678 Views