Ofcom to enable mobile provider switching via free text

by Mark Tyson on 19 December 2017, 13:01

Tags: Ofcom

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Ofcom today announced a major reform with regard to the way people leave one mobile telecoms company and (optionally) begin with another. It sounds like great news for customers; with less friction involved in the process, and service overlap charges eliminated. Unfortunately the changes will take 18 months from now to come into effect.

In its background research Ofcom found that 38 per cent of mobile switchers (2.5 million people) experienced at least one major difficulty in changing mobile service provider. Seven in ten encountered at least some difficulty. Of all the observed hurdles to an easy transfer, the greatest is probably having to speak to your current provider to instigate a change. Mobile telecoms companies usually send customers through various departments trying to convince them to stay before providing the requested PAC (porting authorisation code), needed to move your number to another provider and simultaneously end a contract, for example.

Instead of calling the mobile provider and having to spend time listening to counter offers, and even special retentions department offers, Ofcom says people will be able instead to ‘text to switch’. See the diagram below to see how it will work.

If you have already scanned through the diagram above you will notice another welcome change; the end of paying for old and new services at the same time – AKA the notice period. Ofcom explained in an email to HEXUS that under the new rules “mobile providers will also be banned from charging for notice periods running after the switch date. This will put an end to people paying for old and new services at the same time – saving UK mobile customers around £10m in total each year.”

Ofcom understands that the changes will require mobile telecoms companies to make a number of changes to their systems, billing, text and internet form systems, and co-ordinate with each other about 'instant' future switches etc - so has given the industry an 18 month implementation period. When the new method is implemented customers will immediately receive a PAC or cancellation code on request (via text, internet, or phone). Switching codes will be valid for 30 days after receipt.



HEXUS Forums :: 3 Comments

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This is good news, even if it's 18 months away.

When I switched from O2 to Vodafone recently, I had to spend 15 minutes going through all that retention cr@p with O2. After explaining that I was moving to a £25/month Vodafone tariff and answering numerous questions, I was eventually offered the same package to stay with O2, but costing £40/month. Hmm, let me think about that one for a moment.

What also irritated me was that after explaining why I was leaving O2 (poor signal at home), the retentions adviser insisted that my signal should be fine as that's what their coverage checker shows (until I pointed out that these checkers just use algorithms, and don't always reflect reality).

I really hope the number porting process can be improved too. This time around I ended up with no service from either provider for 6 days, as the porting of my number was a complete balls-up. If I didn't know better, I'd swear that it was done deliberately to put me off switching again in 2 years' time…
Took me almost 40 minutes to get my PAC from Three, and that was with me being insistent all the way that I didn't want a better offer from them I just wanted my PAC. That kind of behaviour *must* put people off going back to them, surely!
squirrelz
Took me almost 40 minutes to get my PAC from Three, and that was with me being insistent all the way that I didn't want a better offer from them I just wanted my PAC. That kind of behaviour *must* put people off going back to them, surely!

It might if any of the other networks didn't do that. I've had PACs from O2, EE, Tesco and 3 in the last few years and they all make you work hard for it.