Who's the biggest Scrooge?

1 post Page 1 of 1
 
 

IVA News

User avatar
Posts: 507
Joined: Sun Sep 11, 2005 3:08 pm
Location: United Kingdom

Post by IVA News » Wed Dec 20, 2006 9:01 am
Gráinne Gilmore names and shames the meanies who made you seethe this year

TIGHT-FISTED, grasping, clutching and covetous. Ring a bell? Charles Dickens uses these words to describe Ebenezer Scrooge in A Christmas Carol. Unfortunately, they may also strike a chord with readers who have suffered at the hands of unscrupulous financial institutions this year.

There has been lively debate on our website about which banks, building societies, broadband companies and other financial providers should be on our list for the Scrooge of the Year, but here we name the worst culprits.

We have excluded Farepak, the collapsed Christmas savings company, as all our Scrooges are going concerns with the capacity to make amends. Let’s hope that they take note, much as Ebenezer did after he was visited by the three spirits and became “as good a friend, as good a master and as good a man as the good old city knew”.

Carphone Warehouse

More than half a million people signed up for free TalkTalk broadband from Carphone Warehouse as part of its £21-a-month international call package. But Carphone Warehouse was unable to meet demand. Tens of thousands of customers were left with no broadband at all, while others found that their connection was slow. To add insult to injury, Charles Dunstone, the chief executive of Carphone Warehouse, asserted that “you always hear more noise from people who have problems”.

We have been inundated with readers’ letters and online postings, detailing their dreadful treatment at the hands of TalkTalk. G. Patino writes: “I had to wait three months for a broadband connection after being told that it would take six weeks. I have only been connected for three months and have now been disconnected during a bodged upgrade.”

A Carphone Warehouse spokesman says: “If you are on a train and are told there is a delay, you don’t feel happy. If you are told why there is a delay and when you will set off, at least you know what’s happening and that someone’s working on it. That’s the approach we have taken with customer service problems.

“This probably means that the industry doesn’t have high enough service levels.

So next year we intend to become the leader in customer service, as we are with the customer offer.”

Nationwide

Nationwide Building Society discovered the folly of preaching one thing and doing another last month. While its television advertisements poked fun at other mortgage lenders that discriminate between new and existing customers, the UK’s biggest building society announced that it would be offering preferential deals to new mortgage customers or existing borrowers who move house.

One longstanding mortgage customer writes: “I had intended to stick with Nationwide when my current deal expires early next year, but the society’s deplorable actions give me absolutely no reason to believe that I would not be better off switching to a lower-rate deal with one of its rivals.”

Alan Oliver, head of external affairs at Nationwide, says: “Our mortgage range offers extremely competitive deals whether you are a new or existing customer, with better rates and fewer fees and charges.”

First Direct

For many years First Direct reigned supreme. The online bank paid good rates of interest and provided top-class customer service. However, its decision to levy a charge on current accounts from February has provoked anger. The only way to sidestep the charge is to deposit £1,500 a month in your account or take out a second financial product from First Direct. About 200,000 of its 1.3 million customers will be affected.

One reader says: “Yet another big company trying to milk it’s loyal customers. Good luck to them; I will be taking my money elswhere.”

A First Direct spokesman says: “More than 85 per cent of our customers will be completely unaffected by the new banking fee. Unlike Scrooge, First Direct’s renowned service representatives will be talking to customers throughout Christmas Day — and night — as we never close.”

Source: The Times

Please post any news stories about IVAs here:
http://www.iva.co.uk/forum/default.asp?CAT_ID=5
Please post any news stories about IVAs here:
http://www.iva.co.uk/forum/default.asp?CAT_ID=5

See my Blog:
http://ivanews.blogs.iva.co.uk
1 post Page 1 of 1
Return to “Latest IVA News”