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Message 11 of 14

Re: Sudden mobile data spike

You could insist on raising a complaint. If they close the complaint without contacting you, you should re-open it until they deal with the complaint to your satisfaction. If enough people complain then will have to look into it from a technical perspective. The annoying thing is that they seem more interested in arguing against genuine customer concerns and less interested in getting to the bottom of this.

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Message 12 of 14

Re: Sudden mobile data spike


@M-ragedwrote:

You could insist on raising a complaint. If they close the complaint without contacting you, you should re-open it until they deal with the complaint to your satisfaction. If enough people complain then will have to look into it from a technical perspective. The annoying thing is that they seem more interested in arguing against genuine customer concerns and less interested in getting to the bottom of this.


When did we get such a "complain, complain, complain" culture. The advice of going into a store is actually really good, someone will be able to llook at the usage on the handset & see there hasn't been any & get an investigation raised

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Message 13 of 14

Re: Sudden mobile data spike

Anyone can check out the mobile data usage on their phone, or indeed, usage of specific apps as well as phone utilisation stats for specific periods. I took verifiable screenshots of all this information from my phone but BT were not interested in considering this as evidence in my case. Sending a customer to a shop is a cop-out (in my opinion), fobbing you off, so that the call centre can maintain call handling targets.
The problem seems to stem from the assumption that people are being dishonest when reporting these issues (in my case, this is what irritated me most of all).
When I raised the problem with BT the agent refused to raise a technical case, his manager refused to accept an escalation and therefore the only options I had left were to accept the £100 overcharge or raise a complaint. My complaint was not totally resolved to my satisfaction but I did get most of the charges waived.
BT will have internal targets to deal with or resolve complaints and therefore the more people who complain about the same or similar issues the more likely it will be investigated. I would suggest that if they don’t want people to complain that they improve their customer service (ie listen to what their customers are saying and be fair, open and honest with them).

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Message 14 of 14

Re: Sudden mobile data spike

I went into an EE BT shop as requested by BT mobile technical. The shop adviser called them but technical did not answer on there number. Tried on my mobile 0800800150 but ended up with EE tech, they transferred me to BT mobile billing. He didn't want to know but I explained all and he spoke to the shop adviser. The shop adviser validate my case by checking the logs, I received a £4.99 refund but there was still no 4G data connection when sister-in-law got home. Rang BT Mobile tech next day to get data back and they still would not believe me. I raised complaint as the issue had been verified and asked to speak to manager.  He went off to speak to him/her, then gave me a months refund and 1GB of data until end of month. Checked usage on MyBT to further complain after call but data over usage evidence has disappeared from account. I believe there is a software fault in calculating people's usage and they don't want to admit it. Lets see if the problem repeats it self again but a lot of time wasted on calls, time going to shop and parking costs.

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