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Why Can’t I Get The Same Deal As A New Customer

Endohr
Joining in

I’m sure this will have come up many times.

So why?

Been a customer for a long long time. New customer can get 1 gig broadband for £38 and I’m told I’ve gotta pay £50+. 

They can’t match it. This was the retentions department and a native bloke we spoke with. 

This really makes no sense. We’ve got to go through the ballache of cancelling, and setting it up in another name and be without the internet for a week approx if we want the new customer deal! 

This isn’t right, surely someone can do something. 

 

4 REPLIES 4

goslow
Alessandro Volta

@Endohr wrote:

I’m sure this will have come up many times.

<snip> This isn’t right, surely someone can do something. 


The question of new customer pricing versus existing customer 'loyalty' is asked and answered on here regularly. Here is a recent topic

https://community.virginmedia.com/t5/Managing-Your-Account-Cable/Why-oh-why-does-loyalty-get-punishe...

Read the helpful advice from Andrew-G at message #5 on the business of renegotiating.

Client62
Legend

VM operate a price ratchet policy, until you cancel the price keeps ramping up !

For the retail (car, home, contents) insurance sector is was made illegal to offer a lower price to a new client at the detriment of the existing clients.

In the telecoms sector, such a law does not exist.

In fact it is much worse.

The telecoms provider is not even required to honour the initial offer price for the duration of the contract.

whiteswan
Dialled in

I went through this yesterday with 1 meg broadband .......... my contract and deal had ended and price had jumped to £62 - all I will say is keep it polite and friendly and you may well see their offer to keep you amazingly near their new customer offer price.

Also I believe if you cancel and restart in a new name at same address you have to wait 90 days - but not 100 percent on this.

Dave

VM would really like everybody to pay more, because they make little profit, and by my estimation the broadband business is loss making.  Unfortunately, whilst customers may disagree, the UK telecoms market is very competitive, and VM have a continual battle trying to acquire new customers (at a loss making price), then trying to retain them whilst hoping they move onto the undiscounted rates or at least a discount that's more profitable than the introductory offers.  That's why you don't (readily) get a renewal offer at the same price as a new customer.  There's a load of maths behind why it makes economic sense to discount new customer rates so heavily, covering expected customer sign ups, customer "lifetime", margins, attrition rates, renewal price rates, but those calculations will be top secret from VM's point of view.

Now, from company investor information it is a stated fact that VM have struggled to get ANY increase in the important Average Revenue Per User figure for about five years or so now, despite annual price hikes.  So ARPU has sat stubbornly around fifty quid per user per month, and in real (inflation adjusted terms) ARPU has actually declined.  The declared ARPU figure is from the mix of hugely discounted new customer rates, "social tariffs", renegotiated rates that are generally a fair bit higher, and a minority on undiscounted tariffs.  It's also across the mix of packages, from basic broadband-only right through to the MaxMongoCouchPotato package of highest speeds, more channels of tripe than you can count, extra TV boxes, pay-per-view, and the full set of phone add-ons and any other chargeable trimmings.   

Fortunately for VM, along came inflation and higher interest rates, that's enabled Openreach to raise wholesale prices, the customer facing large ISPs all hiked their rates and wrote in inflation busting price rises to their T&Cs, so VM have leapt on this opportunity to hike their own rates.  Obviously if enough people leave, or are hard nosed negotiators then the tactic fails.  Worst outcome is if too many people take up alternative suppliers, then VM's customer numbers start to fall, in which case VM's essentially fixed business costs need to be spread across fewer customers.

Does this help you any?  Probably not, but at least you'll understand VM's business practices better.