The Forum > General Discussion > The death of the interests of the customer?
The death of the interests of the customer?
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If I lived *two blocks* further over I would have a choice.
In essence, I can only get ADSL2 from the Gorilla at 2-3 times more expensive than is readily available from opposition companies.
I have ordinary ADSL through another supplier because Telstra were mandated to share that facility at that level. In effect my supplier is a re-seller yet I get it cheaper that from the Big T direct.
I also note that Telstra ignore the "do not call" on my phone as they service it. I get regular calls to "check if I'm getting the best out of the services" (AKA to sell me Foxtel, Mobiles or ADSL2)
Clearly ADSL2 is (IMO) a nice to have but I refuse to be held to ransom for it.
I'm not complaining as such but wonder what others think of Telstra's high handed exploitist strategies.
There is a truism in Customer service ...."for every happy client you get 5 referrals, for every unhappy client you lose 10."
Corporations today simply don't care about the customer just their profit. It seems to me that the link between the two is unimportant if you are the biggest/available. i.e. Convenience and aspiration trumps customers individual needs. But doesn't that negate the principals of Capitalism...bending the silent hand of the customers (AKA market)up their back.
Sadly I could authoritatively point to multiple franchises that inhabit shopping centers that preach, "get as much as you can the first time there may not be a second opportunity".
Availability is the key. people will buy what is there rather than search. This is the reason shopping centres financially limit how many of which sellers goes in.
In supermarket the cash across the till is a just a part of these organizations profits. Profit is multi streamed and has little to do with the customer/choice or indeed the price, to the customer.
Anybody want to guess why we as a society are becoming more insular and indifferent to others.
R.I.P. a fair go?