• On MovieTome: TRANSFORMERS 2 SPOILERS!

July 6, 2007 3:46 PM PDT

Splitting up with your cell phone carrier

A correction was made to this story. Read below for details.
Breaking up is hard to do, especially when you're getting dumped by your cell phone carrier.

After eight years as a Sprint Nextel customer, Rene, who goes under the pseudonym MissDiva on SprintUsers.com, received a letter from Sprint Nextel telling her they were done.

As is the case at the end of many relationships, Rene--who doesn't want her last name used because she was publicly criticized after posting her saga on the SprintUsers.com forum--said she never saw it coming.

"I am very upset," she said. "I was a very loyal customer. I didn't even get the courtesy of a phone call."

Rene's service was cancelled because Sprint said she had called the customer support line too often. In a letter dated June 29, 2007, the company informed her that her service would be terminated on July 30, 2007. The letter also said she wouldn't have to pay the early termination fee, and her account, which she claims she pays in full at the start of every month, would be set to zero.

But while Sprint's letter irked Rene, and most likely other customers who received similar alerts, the company's move shouldn't come as too much of a surprise.

For carriers, customer service calls cut into profits. For a typical wireless subscriber who spends about $55 a month on a service, carriers only realize a profit of about $24, according to Roger Entner, a senior vice president at IAG Research. On average, it costs companies between $2 to $3 for every minute a subscriber is on the phone with a customer support representative, he said. This means that all of a carrier's profit for one subscriber is eliminated after only 8 to 12 minutes per month of phone calls to customer support.

"I'm sure they figure they are losing money on these customers," Entner said. "If you run the crude math, you see that customers who excessively use call centers simply aren't profitable."

According to JD Power & Associates, more than half of all wireless users in the U.S. contacted their wireless customer service department in 2006. Of those who contacted customer support, more than 42 percent of customers contacted their providers with billing issues. And 55 percent of those customers made calls due to inaccurate charges.

Still, even though customer support is costly for wireless operators, none of the major carriers, with the exception of Sprint, have a policy of canceling service when customers make too many calls to these hotlines. That said, carriers including AT&T, Sprint Nextel and Verizon Wireless, all reserve the right to cancel contracts if the majority of their service is used over a roaming network.

Too much roaming can get you cut, too
"We don't cancel customers no matter how many times they call customer support," said Mark Siegel, a spokesman for AT&T. "But we do have a policy against excessive roaming. We realize people will roam from time to time, but we have planned our network for a certain amount of roaming and expect our customers to spend the vast majority of their time on the AT&T network."

Furthermore, Siegel adds that AT&T warns customers that their roaming privileges will be reduced after 30 days, or gives subscribers 60 days to find a new provider.

Verizon has gotten flack recently for canceling subscribers' contracts when people exceeded 5GB of data usage per month on its network. The company advertises its service as unlimited, but Jeffery Nelson, a spokesman for Verizon Wireless, said that using this much bandwidth per month is an indication that customers are using the service for activities that are explicitly prohibited by the usage terms.

Sprint's Dear John letter

Entner said that regardless of the reason, carriers do not take lightly the decision to terminate a customer's contract, especially since it costs them between $300 and $350 to obtain each wireless customer. At this rate, carriers only start making money on new customers after one year of service.

"They don't do this willy-nilly or capriciously," Entner said. "Sometimes they keep customers even if they are slightly unprofitable simply to avoid the bad publicity or to keep their churn rates lower. So if they get to the point where they terminate a customer, usually the problems are really significant."

Indeed, Sprint spokeswoman Roni Singleton said the company only terminates contracts as a last resort. She wouldn't discuss the specific details of any particular customer's situation, but she said the cancellation letters issued on June 29 only impacted a "small minority" of customers. She would not specify how many.

"We have to be able to quickly and efficiently serve customers," Singleton said. "And when we are unable to consistently solve our customers' problems, it results in a lot of frustration and longer waits for other customers. So after looking through our records, we were able to determine that there were customers (whose needs) we couldn't meet."

 

Correction: This story misidentified the amount of monthly data usage that has prompted Verizon Wireless to cancel subscriber contracts. The amount is anything in excess of 5GB per subscriber.

See more CNET content tagged:
Sprint Nextel, cell phone carrier, AT&T Corp., letter, subscriber

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 49 comments (Showing first 20 comments)
Imagine
by myuan July 6, 2007 7:11 PM PDT
Imagine if Tmobile followed suit and dismissed customers who called in too often to complain about dropped calls and overages? Wow, they will have to cut off 50% of their client base!
Reply to this comment
Early Termination with no fee!!!
by Renceward July 6, 2007 9:27 PM PDT
I have been a Sprint customer for years - I am getting more and more fed up with Sprint but I can't leave right now because of early termination penalties. Now I know how to get out of that - all I need to do is start calling customer service and wait for them to cancel my account - I escape free and clear with no cancellation fee.
Reply to this comment
If I pay more than $100.00 a month....
by tekwiz4u July 6, 2007 10:05 PM PDT
then I deserve the right to call them as much as I want. This is another example of customer satisfaction gone in the toilet. I applaud her for speaking out and letting others know.

Everyone has their limits, but that should not affect how we treat loyal customers. Especially a company that employs 1000+ people to keep customers happy. Looks like to me that they cant do the job.
Reply to this comment
5MB/mo??? I don't think so!
by pjk0 July 6, 2007 10:23 PM PDT
Perhaps you meant 5 GIGabytes per month?
Reply to this comment View reply
A word of advice for Sprint
by techie2479 July 7, 2007 6:45 AM PDT
Quit trying to push your service faults on to clients as their responsibility: it's appalling! Maybe you wouldn't have the highest churn of state-side wireless suppliers--or those financial losses--if you actually knew the meaning of Customer Service. It sounds like you have some serious company-wide problems that need to be addressed immediately.
Reply to this comment
Early termination should work both ways.
by xmit30 July 7, 2007 7:59 AM PDT
Sprint should pay their terminated customers the same fee that they demand if a customer wants to quit on their own. That would be fair since the terminated customer now has to spend more time shopping for a new service and they should be compensated for the trouble. On the other hand if Sprint's web site was more interactive at resolving their customers problems then the cost of maintaining support staff would not be a factor in terminating customers. Sprint needs to fix the reason why customers contact them in the first place.
Reply to this comment View reply
spint(ing to failure)
by jrzshor July 7, 2007 8:06 AM PDT
After "careful consideration" your plan was waaay tooo cheap. So
bye bye.

That is the beab counters. Most companies that lose money tend
to "fire" staff. Customers are usually not fired unless it costs the
company. Soon they will be firing employees.

Oh yes, and top management will get millions in bonuses!!!

**** heads that they all are.
Reply to this comment
missing info
by tanis143 July 7, 2007 8:38 AM PDT
Ok, I really can not comment too much on this since the whole story is not there. Sprint claimed she called an excessive amount of times to customer service, but we do not know what those calls were about. Working in customer care for many places I know that people will call in for the most ridiculous things, such as claiming they didn't make that long distance call, or didn't order that pay per view when the company knows for a fact that they did. If she was calling in all the time to try and get charges removed that were just charges, then I can see why Sprint would drop her.

So, with that in mind, I wont say who is at fault here. Remember, you always get two sides of the story, one persons side and the other persons side, very rarely do you ever get the full truth.
Reply to this comment View all 2 replies
Excessive Roaming?!!!
by iBuzz July 7, 2007 9:15 AM PDT
Well maybe if Sprint's offered broader wireless coverage, their customers would not need to roam off-network so often. It's just amazing to me that a company is taking a shortcoming of its service and using it against its customers like this.
Reply to this comment View all 2 replies
Wishing I'd Get Dumped!
by maf63 July 7, 2007 8:25 PM PDT
I have been a VERY loyal Sprint Customer for 7 years..I have been overbilled every single month more than $100 for about 2 years!..I truly believe that I have held up my end of my agreement, carrying 4 lines and paying my bill, but monthly I have to go into the Sprint Store (where they know me very well by now!) and go over my bill with them, once again, make them take off the amenities which for 2 years I have been telling them I do not want....Every Sprint employee that I deal with face to face knows exactly what I am talking about and one actually gave me the 'sacred' 'not to be given out' telephone number to the district manager here..needless to say, I am leaving Sprint, I will NOT pay any fees and will never look back...After all the times I have had to go into the stores and call customer service, I'm amazed I didn't receive one of those letters!!!....What I would give for one...I will be gone this week come hell or high water!
Reply to this comment
Amazing...
by ogman July 8, 2007 8:40 AM PDT
This is just the latest arrogant move by a company that refuses to provide decent customer service. I hope every Sprint customer cancels their service. Certainly, no one should ever sign up with them, knowing that they have no intention of taking care of their customers.

The business plan for the new millenium: Money for nothin'!
Reply to this comment
Make sure to look at it from all angles . . .
by bigdefense02 July 8, 2007 1:05 PM PDT
Before I comment on this, let me state where I am coming from, I am an employee for a Third Party Sprint Call Center, who works in an escalation dept, working with issues from both Sprint & Nextel customers. I read the article that Sprint has come out with for Customer Care reps to read(I guess it's not open to public yet), & it stated that people who are "released" are customer's who call in far too often. Now, by what I mean as far too often is numbering in the hundreds per month. Sprint stated that there have only been about 1,200 customer's that have been sent this notice, which only makes up about 1 in every 40,000 customers who got this. On top of this, these people who called in all these times who were released, it wasn't about an ongoing issue, it was about issued that Sprint had already deemed either resolved or fixed, & the customer was just calling in repeatedly to try & get a rep that wouldn't follow Sprint procedure, who would give them their way. If you have an actual issue; a valid ONGOING issue, please do not let this persuade you from calling in, but if you are one of these customers who is a repeat offender, the kind that absolutely ruin the whole day of most good reps, I ask you kindly, please either stop calling in & wasting Sprints time, or find another carrier who wants to put up with it. I am obviously not speaking on behalf of Sprint officially, but I can tell you for sure that I am speaking on behalf of the majority of reps who work for Sprint(& most likely reps from all Cell Phone Providers.)
Reply to this comment View reply
Yeh right
by jdtj63 July 8, 2007 10:04 PM PDT
If you call customer service you will have to call back many times before you can get someone who can speak english well enought to understand them. Do yourself a favor and drop sprint they ar e awfull at customer care.
Reply to this comment
Sprint is the worst company ever
by Louienyc75 July 9, 2007 1:44 AM PDT
This article made me laugh because I myself may be affected. Sprint has made a heavenly decision by liberating these soon to be grateful customers from this garbage company. The woman in the article will soon realize it's for the better, service that is. Sprint has done a horrid job with Nextel, ruining it, and their own service is subpar. Those who like Sprint have low standards for cell service and are misinformed. If I insult anyone well then compare your Sprint service with some other carrier like Verizon or Alltel and then tell Consumer Reports and any disgruntled customers that they are wrong and say three times, Sprint is great.
Reply to this comment View reply
Inside Story on Sprint's Billing Problems
by royallensmith July 9, 2007 6:05 AM PDT
We would definitely like to get cut off by Sprint without a termination fee. The service problems with Sprint have been horrific for several months. The inside scoop on Sprint's trouble; This information came from a Sprint customer service specialist who will remain unidentified. Sprint has been trying to upgrade their online website. Sprint has been unsuccessful for several months in trying to integrate the two different billing systems. The source of many of the problems we have been experiencing, wrong account balance, can't sign in, services added without permission, overcharging, has been the online website. When we sign into our account using a user name and password, the billing system defaults back to the old billing system. There is a little box in the settings page that apparently "checks itself" as the user signs onto the new billing system with the existing user name and password and sends the user back onto the old billing network. You know this is happening when you call *2 for customer service as the voice will state "just so you know you owe $ and you will need to pay this right away". The amount is usually in the hundreds of dollars as the system is screwed up and is somehow adding the balalnces of prevous bills that have already been paid. If you have paid your bill and you go to a Sprint store or call customer service they will say your bill is zero as they are on the correct billing system. You would think after several months a company like Sprint which has millions of dollars would have been able to solve the problem. They will lie to you and say there is no problem but I got this information from the inside. Anybody interested in a class action suit?
Reply to this comment View all 3 replies
Internet Service
by wyomingsundancer July 9, 2007 6:18 AM PDT
I made the mistake of signing up with Sprint for internet service (Air Card for laptop internet). I provided my own card, so Sprint was not out any "FREE" equipment. About two months later I was injured and lost my job as a result. I no longer needed the service. The first call to customer service Sprint agreed to terminate the internet service without penalty due to the fact that I had provided my own air card. The next month I recieved a bill for the service though, this went on for almost a year with several calls to customer service and stopping by a Sprint Store. The service was supposed to be stopped. Then we got a bill in excess of $300 because we had not called to cancel a service that was already cancelled. I would not talk to Sprint anymore. My wife made several calls and they finally agreed to actually drop the service that they agreed to drop over a year ago. We did get one adjusted bill since then. Now waiting to see if in a month or two we will be right back where we were with monthly billing for a service that was cancelled.
Reply to this comment
5GB/mo not 5MB/mo
by trifster July 9, 2007 6:18 AM PDT
where the hell are the editors and proofreaders? terrible.
Reply to this comment
Sprint: learn from other companies!
by Xtoo July 9, 2007 8:06 AM PDT
I am just amazed about how many companies have a horrible
customer service. Starting with the fact that when you call to
"order service" you get someone in the US to answer your call;
but if you call about "billing or support" issues you get routed
to India or Philippines, where usually they do not have the same
systems and can barely understand what they say - to the point
of frustration.

Can't companies learn from a place like American Express? I
have been a member since I was 22 (34 now) and have never
ever experienced bad customer service. They are the most
helpful people I can think of. Second in my list is Apple; in my
experience their customer service is just as good as Amex; and
that is something to say when they are trying to solve (for
hours) computer issues with grandma on the phone.

Business move or not Sprint has fallen into crappy policy, and I
am glad I am not their customer anymore. Luckily, I left right
before they bought Nextel -which was another piece of crap
company-. Maybe they learn their bad habits way too quick.
Reply to this comment View reply
Sprint Cancel Contracts
by redlus July 9, 2007 9:06 AM PDT
They may be in violation of their own tariffs. There are big fines associated with activity by a company that is disguised as a troublesome customer; when the real intent is that the customer has a great deal and it is not profitable to the company. That is what this sounds like. A call to the appropriate regulatory agency should be made.If the facts of this article hold up; the customer will prevail and the company will be fined. The customer may win not only retro-active re-instatement; but a period of time they will not be charged for service as part of the settlement. Go get em'
Reply to this comment
They are a bad company.....
by gwats1957 July 9, 2007 9:47 AM PDT
I'm a verizon customer for about 12 years now and I can see a
bad carrier a mile off. Sprint/Nextel is a dead carrier walking.
I'm in the middle of my last 2 year deal with verizon. I can't see
ever having another phone without a sim card or the ability to
take my phone overseas or use a cheap SIM card to save money.
By the end of my Verizon deal, I'll have two unlocked phones
ready for my next wireless deal.
Reply to this comment View reply
 See all 49 Comments >>
Powered by Jive Software
advertisement

Latest tech news headlines

RSS Feeds

Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.

More feeds available in our RSS feed index.

advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right