Kimmer: Is the penalty greater than the savings/improvements you could make if you switched providers now? If so it could be worth a punt at your present provider to see if they come up with something better. If they don't, then dump them and take the other deal
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On the basis of this thread, we seem to do quite well here. Today's exchange rate is $1.63 US to the GBP so I'll let you do the sums.
My "original pay-as-you-go" tariff on Virgin Mobile has no monthly charges; calls to landlines and other Virgin mobiles are 25p per minute for the first five minutes each day, then 1p per minute for the rest of the day, with a 25p minimum for each call; calls to other mobile networks are 41p per minute. Calls to some charities and helplines are free. Texts to other Virgin mobiles are 10p each, to other networks 12p; no charge for receiving. Calls between the UK and other EU countries are 24p to send and 7p to receive; 8p per text sent, but receiving is free.
Caroline's VM tariff is billed at £15.76 per month by direct debit. For that she is allowed 400 minutes of voice calls to all UK mobile and landline numbers (apart from premium numbers), 3,000 texts and 1GB mobile web (which neither of us ever uses). Her account shows she still has 163 minutes and 2,924 texts to go before the end of the billing period tomorrow.
Big surprise a few months back was a call
from VM volunteering a discount on her monthly tariff. After the obvious question she was told it was a combination of being a valued long-term customer and a light user. Oh, and they don't want to lose her to the competition, which is quite fierce here. We all know which was really top of that list
The bill still shows £15.76, with the healthy discount shown as a credit. Posters on help forums frequently tell folk with problems to call "retentions" or "disconnections" to say why they're thinking of leaving. Seems to get quicker results because they're usually talking to someone in THIS country
Our landline phone and fibre-optic broadband line rental bill is around £35 per month, inclusive of evening and weekend landline calls, and speeds of 75MBps down/15 up with no traffic restrictions.
Here's a useful page on negotiating a better deal - from the UK's
MoneySavingExpert site. Much could probably be adapted for use in any country with more than one network.
QUOTE
There are no hard and fast negotiating rules, but a bit of chutzpah and a smile (try it, it's noticeable in your voice even on the phone) works wonders. It's a game, with huge gains on the upside and no loss on the downside.
Aim to do this around a month before your current contract ends, as then you're most realistically liable to ditch and leave. Try it earlier and you're simply met with “you've a contract and can't cancel it”.
Time to leave the