Telcos call for radical overhaul of TIO

 

AAPT, MacTel, Telstra, VHA and others list their demands.

Australia’s telecommunications providers have called on  the Federal Government to impose widespread changes to the operation of the industry-funded Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman (TIO).

The Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy published submissions received by the telcos in response to its discussion paper yesterday.

The Department sought views on whether the TIO’s dispute resolution mechanism was fair or efficient and whether it promoted the industry to provide better processes to customers.

The most pressing issues were:

  • That the TIO is motivated to escalate complaints as a consequence of its funding structure – a potential conflict of interest.
  • The TIO’s methodology for reporting the level of complaints, particularly the practice of a single complaint being recorded multiple times.
  • Calls to collapse the TIO Board and the TIO Council into a single entity.
  • A need to broaden the TIO’s jurisdiction to encompass Pay TV customer complaints.
  • A recommended self-imposed timeframe on dealing with complaints in order to provide more timely resolutions to disputes.

The TIO was funded according to the amount of complaints it receives, which the telcos suggest encourages the ombudsman to inflate the amount of complaints it receives and count single complaints multiple times.

Telcos were also concerned that it had an economic incentive to escalate rather than resolve disputes at the first instance. For example, telcos are charged $31 for level 1 complaints, but the fees rises very sharply thereafter, with level 2 complaints incurring a $260 fee, level 3 incurring $475 and level 4 complaints attracting a whopping  $2250 fee.

This point was highlighted in Vodafone Hutchison Australia’s submission, which called for a fundamental overhaul of the TIO’s current funding model.

“There are two reasons why the funding model must change. First, the funding structure exacerbates perceptions of a conflict of interest in how the TIO scheme functions. Second, the TIO requires a stronger incentive to resolve, rather than simply handle, customer complaints,” the VHA submission said.

The mobile carrier’s submission added that while the TIO scheme is designed to cover its costs, it has no incentive to manage its costs efficiently. 

AAPT expressed concern that, unlike in Britain and New Zealand, there was no requirement in Australia for a consumer to show that they did in fact first try to address the complaint with their service provider.

“It is AAPT’s understanding that the TIO does ask consumers who contact them whether they have contacted their service provider about the complaint, however, there is no way to verify that contact had in fact been made.”

The complaint escalation schemes in operation in both the United Kingdom and New Zealand requires consumers to have received a “deadlock” letter stating that the service provider will not be doing anything about the particular complaint before contacting the equivalent of the TIO in each of those jurisdictions.

AAPT also called for the timeframe for resolution of a level 1 TIO complaint to be increased from its current duration of 14 days up to 30 days to bring it in line with the Telecommunications Customer Protection Code, which specifies a time frame of 30 days to offer a mutually satisfactory resolution to a customer.

AAPT reminded the department that the TIO has always based its publicly reported complaint numbers on member billing records. A complaint is registered when a service provider is invoiced by the TIO, even though it may be invoiced many times for a consumer complaint.

“Consequently, the single consumer complaints are often counted multiple times by the TIO.”

AAPT recommended that the TIO should implement changes to the way it reports complaint numbers so that:

  • multiple counting of single complaints is eliminated; and
  • in addition to reporting absolute numbers of complaints per service provider, the TIO should report complaints per service provider per service in operation.

Telstra said the TIO should hold itself accountable to published timeframes for resolving complaints.

Although they may require flexibility to allow for consideration of complex cases, it would promote the more prompt resolution of matters, and may ensure that some matters do not linger, Telstra said.

The market incumbent also called for the re-establishment of the TIO as an office of last resort, which it argued should be objectively reinforced by the TIO’s own processes.

Macquarie Telecom was among the critics of the current make-up of the TIO board, and joined in the call for restructuring of the organisation.

“The TIO is governed by two masters: the TIO Board which provides corporate governance advice, and the TIO Council which provides advice on policy and procedural matters. In any setting, serving two masters is inevitably impossible. This is exacerbated to the extent that while both consumers and the industry are represented on the TIO Council, consumers are not represented on the TIO Board. This has led to conflict between the TIO Board and TIO Council and to calls for the collapse of the TIO’s current structure.”

Macquarie Telecom said that the TIO Board and TIO Council should be collapsed into a single overseeing body which has equal industry and consumer representation and an independent chair.

Macquarie also echoed the thoughts expressed in most of the other submissions to the Department that the TIO’s jurisdiction should be expanded to encompass pay TV, given that many consumers are now supplied telephony, Internet access and a pay TV service in a bundle from a single supplier. Currently, the TIO’s reach only extends to the telephony and Internet components of the bundle, but not the pay TV element.

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


Telcos call for radical overhaul of TIO
"AAPT should clean up its own backyard before whinging and whining what the TIO should do. AAPT (iINet), and others should have never gone offshore with call centres. I am all for "proper" ..."
By sloth555
 
 
 
Comments: 6
cj7hawk
Apr 20, 2011 4:44 PM

The only change the TIO needs to make is to run an advertising campaign to increase awareness about it's existence. I have had to use them many times to assist in cases in which the Telco really didn't have a leg to stand on but was determined not to meet their legal obligations anyway. In my experience, the Telco's own methods of dealing with client problems is completely inadequate and if not for the TIO, we would see a return of the COT CASES era ( COT cases were Casualties Of Telstra from the 90's and before ) The TIO emphatically has my support for delivering badly needed services and keeping the Telco's honest and I have never seen them unreasonably escalate a case ever. If anything, in my experience they have always been more than fair to the Telcos. Top marks TIO, Shame on you Telco's.
anonymous
Apr 20, 2011 6:08 PM

It seems strange that various industry players are said to be "demanding" a watering down of the TIO charter for the industry ADR scheme.

Apparently every member of the TIO board is appointed by industry, so if industry heavyweights claim there is a problem it may be a case of: physician, heal thyself.

Unless the answer is to go to a government-run ombudsman scheme with full statutory backing. Judging from the current background noises, this may now be the best, or only, way to go.
pameacs
Apr 20, 2011 6:14 PM
I have a good solution, why don't we simply make it 1% of the Telco's profit goes to fund the TIO, and then if a case gets to level 3 they get slugged with a $1000 charge and in the event they are found to have knowingly slowed a complaint then they get hit 1000/day half to the customer and half to the TIO for their laggard behavior in resolving customer issues. That should make an incentive for the Telco's to deal with the problem and if they are not profitable then they don't fund the TIO. Now lets see how much did Telstra make last year???

Funding issue solved and its fair. What more could they all ask for??
Perdix
Apr 21, 2011 1:51 PM
whilst the TIO provides a fundamentally valuable service, there are areas for improvement. In particular;
Statistics. The TIO doesn't publish statistics, but numbers. No account is taken of the volume of services, or the number of a particular transaction type. A basic measure I would have thought.
Telco's are required to advertise on behalf of the TIO, this creates an impression that the TIO is a first resort solution, not the last resort it was designed as.
The TIO has become a consumer advocate, largely as a consequence of its funding model. It is supposed to be fair and equitable.

Non of these matters are difficult to fix, the larger issue is that Industry has been making the same comments for a long time, so why has it taken so long for the Govt to address them?
anonymous
Apr 21, 2011 6:34 PM

@Perdix, you have good points, but some things seem to need further comment:

Statistics. It would be interesting to see the info you refer to, but it may not be the view of some (any?) companies that the details of their customer base should be publicly revealed.

Telcos don't 'advertise on behalf of the TIO', but some of them include info about the TIO as a source of last-resort resolution; this is usually made pretty clear.

Given that the TIO is an industry funded and controlled dispute resolution scheme, it is hard to see how the allegation that 'The TIO has become a consumer advocate' can reasonably be sustained.
sloth555
May 27, 2011 4:28 PM
AAPT should clean up its own backyard before whinging and whining what the TIO should do. AAPT (iINet), and others should have never gone offshore with call centres. I am all for "proper" commercial decisions, but really..being answered by people with no proper understanding of the English language is frustrating, not to mention poor sound quality on the calls which only inflames the experience. And you just have to love the way you can not contact anyone in Australia when you complain to AAPT. I had no choice but to complain to the TIO after numerous calls to AAPT, not to mention incorrect information from their call centre on more than two occasions. Another frustrating thing is that AAPT use bloody Vodaphone for mobile calls from land lines. So when you ring from the land line it is of course via Telstra to the exchange, if it's a mobile number from landline it is via Vodaphone mobile network, but nobody told customers who the mobile provider was. If I had known it was Vodaphone I would have cancelled and glady paid an early exit fee.
Comments have been disabled for this article.
 
 
Top Stories
The illusion of cognitive computing
Opinion: IBM's Watson is a marketing success.
 
Photos: AusCERT 2013 day one
First day of the Queensland security conference.
 
CenITex to move from IT provider to broker
Documents reveal new strategy.
 
 
Sign up to receive iTnews email bulletins
   FOLLOW US...

Latest VideosSee all videos »

Bankwest builds continuous delivery capability
Bankwest builds continuous delivery capability
To automatically deploy test/dev sandboxes by mid-year.
Veterans' Affairs sets sights on modernisation
Veterans' Affairs sets sights on modernisation
Data safe with Human Services, CIO says.
Citi Australia drops platform customisations
Citi Australia drops platform customisations
Technology chief shifts focus from building to leveraging systems.
VicRoads restructures IT team
VicRoads restructures IT team
Department moves to align with industry benchmarks.
Zurich Australia extends IT team offshore
Zurich Australia extends IT team offshore
Malaysian staff served from Australian data centres.
Leigh Berrell - Utilities CIO of the Year
Leigh Berrell - Utilities CIO of the Year
Yarra Valley Water CIO Leigh Berrell accepts his Benchmark Award for Utilities CIO of the Year.
Wayne McMahon - Retail CIO of the Year
Wayne McMahon - Retail CIO of the Year
Domino's Pizza CIO Wayne McMahon accepts his Benchmark Award for Retail CIO of the Year.
Inside Perpetual's ongoing IT transformation
Inside Perpetual's ongoing IT transformation
CIO Jenny Levy discusses how outsourcing will help the firm "simplify, refocus and grow".
Managing Complexity - Defence's Daniel McCabe
Managing Complexity - Defence's Daniel McCabe
Daniel McCabe, Assistant Secretary of Australia's Department of Defence, provides the audience at the iTnews Data Centre Strategy Summit with a deep dive into the organisation's data centre consolidation program.
How Facebook designed the data centre from scratch - Marco Magarelli
How Facebook designed the data centre from scratch - Marco Magarelli
The full keynote by Facebook data centre architect Marco Magarelli at the Australian Data Centre Strategy Summit. Magarelli details the design considerations behind the social network's Prineville, Oregon; North Carolina and Luleå, Sweden data centres.
Modernising Legacy Data Centres - Telstra's Jon Curry
Modernising Legacy Data Centres - Telstra's Jon Curry
Telstra general manager of managed data centres Jon Curry guides the audience at the iTnews Australian Data Centre Summit through the build of the telco's Clayton, Victoria data centre.
NSW Government launches NABERS data centre rating tools
NSW Government launches NABERS data centre rating tools
Matthew Clark from the NSW Department of Environment guides facilties managers through the details of the new NABERS data centre energy rating tool at the Australian Data Centre Strategy Summit.
NABERS launch panel: Australian Data Centre Strategy Summit
NABERS launch panel: Australian Data Centre Strategy Summit
Matthew Clark (NSW Dept of Environment), Greg Boorer (Canberra Data Centres), Glenn Allan (National Australia Bank), Mike Andrea (Strategic Directions) and Bob Sharon (Green Global Consulting) discuss the impact of the NABERS data centre rating.
Judges notes: Fortescue Metals [The Benchmark Awards]
Judges notes: Fortescue Metals [The Benchmark Awards]
iTnews' panel of judges discuss Fortescue Metals 'New World of Work" project, one of three shortlisted finalists for the Industrials category of the CIO Benchmark Awards.
Judges notes: Retail [The Benchmark Awards]
Judges notes: Retail [The Benchmark Awards]
iTnews' panel of judges discuss the shortlisted finalists for the Retail category of the CIO Benchmark Awards.
Judges notes: Pacific Aluminium [The Benchmark Awards]
Judges notes: Pacific Aluminium [The Benchmark Awards]
iTnews' panel of judges discuss Pacific Aluminium's lightning fast service desk refresh, one of three shortlisted finalists for the Industrials category of the CIO Benchmark Awards.
Judges notes: Domino's Pizza [The Benchmark Awards]
Judges notes: Domino's Pizza [The Benchmark Awards]
iTnews' panel of judges discuss Domino's Pizza's shift to hosted services, one of three shortlisted finalists for the Retail category of the CIO Benchmark Awards.
Judges notes: McDonald's Australia [The Benchmark Awards]
Judges notes: McDonald's Australia [The Benchmark Awards]
iTnews' panel of judges discuss McDonald's Australia's new self-service portal for employees, one of three shortlisted finalists for the Retail category of the CIO Benchmark Awards.
Judges notes: ING Direct [The Benchmark Awards]
Judges notes: ING Direct [The Benchmark Awards]
iTnews' panel of judges discuss ING Direct's 'Bank in a Box', one of three shortlisted finalists for the banking and finance category of the CIO Benchmark Awards.
Judges notes: Yarra Valley Water [The Benchmark Awards]
Judges notes: Yarra Valley Water [The Benchmark Awards]
iTnews' panel of judges discuss Yarra Valley Water's insourcing project, one of three shortlisted finalists for the Utilities category of the CIO Benchmark Awards.
Latest articles on BIT Latest Articles from BIT
HP's ElitePad 900: how it's different to the Surface Pro
May 23, 2013
Buying a tablet to use at work? These photos show why the HP ElitePad 900 G1 is an interesting ...
eftpos to trial "mobile wallet"
May 17, 2013
eftpos, the operator of Australia's most widely used debit card system will soon start a mobile ...
New iiNet 4G phone plans include free calls between phones on same account
May 16, 2013
iiNet's new 4G mobile business plans provide free calls between handsets on the same account as ...
Revealed: $1,000+ for Microsoft's Surface Pro in Australia, with keyboard
May 16, 2013
You'll pay more than $1,000 for Microsoft Surface Pro with a keyboard, Microsoft has officially ...
Is this the future of business laptops?
May 15, 2013
The Lenovo ThinkPad Helix is a fully-fledged business laptop running Windows 8 Pro, but detach ...
Latest Comments
Polls
Do you prefer the Coalition's NBN policy?

   |   View results
Yes
  19%
 
No
  81%
TOTAL VOTES: 1707

Vote