Hi, I was moved from BT to EE on 19 April, almost a month ago.
I was on the highest package full fibre 900 and was supposed to get like for like on the full works 900 with EE.
my issue is that despite talking to over 10 agents I still don’t have working EE wifi disc or Hybrid Connect. My house is bad for wifi and so over the years BT had given me 4 of their black wifi discs. EE you can have 3 , only 1 has been sent, but the issue is there is a KNOWN IT issue on their side that does not activate the wifi disc service nor the hybrid connect.
my complaint has been closed twice for no apparent reason and each agent tells me something different!
it has been escalated a number of times but no one seems interested or able to fix it. Both me and my wife run our business / jobs from home and we are struggling to get WiFi signals in our offices so are getting really desperate here. I’ve spent hours on phone to agents repeating my story…..
I wish I had stayed with BT as was happy with a fully working system!!!
any help is appreciated
thanks
Alastair
Solved! Go to Solution.
as you have transferred your account to EE then you need to post on the EE community for assistance https://community.ee.co.uk/
Just to add, you should not be running a business on a residential account, whether its BT or EE, as its not permitted under the T&Cs.
Perhaps you should consider BT Business or EE Business, if you want something reliable?
Some employers do pay for a business connection, if an employees provides a critical service that need a proper SLA (Service Level Agreement).
Home working is normally accepted on a residential account, as its very common, as you would expect. Internal connectivity issues would be the responsibility of the end user. Wireless is not a reliable method of connection, Ethernet connections are the only way.
You are not the only one, judging by what has been posted on the EE forum.
My personal opinion is that the two BT divisions, should have stayed separate, as EE is heavily involved in mobile services, and does not have the resources to deal with broadband migrations.
Depending on what you're paying for it, it might be more economical to purchase your own mesh system. You would hope that EE wouldn't resist the downgrade given that they admit they can't fulfil what you're paying for.