Vodafone chief says 'sorry' for 3G network

 

Suggests issues are at an "individual" - not network - level.

Vodafone chief Nigel Dews has apologised to customers for the way it has dealt with a slew of 3G network issues in recent months without any explanation of the root cause of the problems.

The carrier has been under sustained pressure from customers after weeks of dropped calls and slow data speeds.

It blamed a "software fault" for the issues on its 3G network and claimed the issues were resolved; however, it since suffered an apparently unrelated transmission outage in Western Australia that cut services for three hours in that state.

And it faced continued embarrassment as customers vented their anger in lengthy Whirlpool forum threads and on a new site called 'Vodafail'.

"Having customers who are happy with their service and their network experience is central to us, but unfortunately in recent weeks, some customers have had a disappointing and frustrating experience which I am very sorry for," Dews said.

"Looking at your comments on various blogs including here on our own, it's clear we could have done a better job at keeping you across what's been happening."

Despite the apology, Vodafone did not explain "what's been happening" and continued to downplay the extent of the problems, describing them as "intermittent" and as impacting only "some" customers.

And Dews also appeared to try and deflect criticism of the company's network as a whole, putting the blame on issues at an "individual" - rather than a whole-of-network - level.

"We have been working with customers on a case by case basis to understand individual situations, resolve the issues and see what we can do to put things right," Dews said.

Questions about the ability of the Vodafone 3G network to support smartphone and mobile data growth were raised as early as June 2009 in an internal newsletter leaked to iTnews. The newsletter exposed coverage, degradation, dropouts and echo as users' biggest bugbears.

Dews urged unhappy customers to seek support directly from Vodafone.

The competition watchdog has already said it does not advocate unhappy customers walking away from their contracts.

Copyright © iTnews.com.au . All rights reserved.


Vodafone chief says 'sorry' for 3G network
"fphhotchips That simply is not true. Vodafone have a far more wide reaching international network than Telstra. The amounts they are charging are simply not defensible either morally or legally. ..."
By Louis Leahy
 
 
 
Comments: 8
billyho_35
Dec 22, 2010 10:14 AM
Dews "claimed the issues were resolved" - perhaps he can explain why just yesterday I received an MMS 6.5 hours after it had been sent, and why voicemail has taken as much as 52 hours to be received!?
We have been released from our business contract with Vodafone without any fight from their end. They know the end is nigh, and good riddance to their disgraceful 'service.'
DJ
Dec 22, 2010 10:41 AM
The "chief" should be careful telling more fibs to cover up the real state of play.

The place to look is at each cell tower....... you might find the infrastructure and bandwidth to deliver data services is just not there.

Best thing is to admit to some issues, then provide customers with details of an infrastructure upgrade program.
Louis Leahy
Dec 22, 2010 11:44 AM
So does this mean Vodafone are going to apologise for charging $10,000 per GB for roaming data? Ridiculous charlatans!
fphhotchips
Dec 22, 2010 11:57 PM
Louis, IIRC, Vodafone roams onto Telstra, and only pass on the costs that Telstra demands of them. Certainly, that is how it works for 3 customers (or, that's how it was explained to me by the 3 saleswoman).
Ezy2Confuze
Dec 23, 2010 9:40 AM
Individual issues my foot. We have three seperate Vodafone users who all signed up in the last month, one has the new HTC Desire, the other two BB's. All three have data issues. Two friends who both have iPhones have complained about uploading to Facebook the last three weeks in a row. Even after uninstalling and re-installing the App. Something's going on, either they didn't plan the number right with the 3 Vodaphone customer merger or somethings seriously wrong with their infrastructure.
Mordd
Dec 24, 2010 12:02 PM
Just this week ive changed my mobile service from VHA to iiNet and I couldn't be happier, been with Vodafone for over 6 years (longer?) but I will never use them again, they are nothing like what they used to be in the good old days, customer service and network quality is aking to Hellstra service levels, no thanks.
DoubleEweAreEx
Dec 24, 2010 1:40 PM
All our work services are with VF and they havent missed a beat and the coverage is pretty good.
Louis Leahy
Jan 18, 2011 4:38 PM
fphhotchips That simply is not true. Vodafone have a far more wide reaching international network than Telstra. The amounts they are charging are simply not defensible either morally or legally. They are getting away with it in the short term but in the long term they are creating embittered corporate customers who don't forget and will bide their time to jettison them.
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