The CRTC comes through for Worldline’s High-Speed Unlimited Customers

CRTC

We love you. We really, really love you!

It’s not too often when you get to say, “gee, I love my government,” but today you can, at least in relation to your data costs.

If you are a Worldline Unlimited High-Speed Internet customer that is.

For folks signed up to some other Internet Service Providers… well, not so much.

What makes us different from many other ISP’s is this; we are exclusively using something called a “Digital Subscriber Line” or DSL to provide Internet service to our customers.

And yesterday, Canada’s telecommunications watchdog ruled that our DSL customers have been paying way too much for their Internet, (which is something we’ve been saying for years by the way).

The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission announced Thursday it has established a standard billing model to set new limits on how much the telecom behemoths can charge independent Internet providers, (that’s us), who need to access their infrastructure.

That means some independent Internet providers could see “significant reductions” in the wholesale rates they pay to the dominant players like Bell and Telus, whose DSL networks the smaller ISPs use.

Again, that’s us, although we ain’t that small; 300,000 people use our services after all. One of the key words in there is “some,” because the CRTC also ruled that wholesale rates for cable Internet networks will go up. By a lot.

So basically what it all means is this:

  • If you get your Internet via cable, like Rogers customers for example, your Internet bill is about to go up.
  • If you are a customer of an ISP, like say, TekSavvy who offers both cable and DSL, your bill will go up because they are going to have to spread the sting of the cable price hike to all their customers regardless of how they get their Internet.

But if you are our customer, well, we’re going to share in the savings with you. We’re not precisely sure how as of yet as this announcement just came down the pipe, (and we’ll be too busy partying for a while).

But in short order we’ll be letting you know how we’re going to take advantage of this fantastic ruling and how it will impact you,

Again, only if you are a Worldine Unlimited High-Speed Internet customer that is. And if you’re not, after reading this, what the heck are you thinking?

So stay tuned. 2013 is shaping up to be a great year!

 

A Letter from the CEO

Okay, this isn’t an actual letter from the CEO. Tricked ya! But after you are all hooked up with Worldline’s Home Phone & Internet Bundle, in the welcome package that includes stuff like the modem, cables, instructions, discount coupons etc, you will also find this on page one:

Jody_message

Page 1 of the Bundle Welcome booklet

This letter from Jody provides our customers, be they unlimited long distance calling customers, unlimited international calling customers, unlimited high-speed internet customers or Internet and home phone with unlimited long distance bundle customers, with his personal email address, which means all our customers have direct access to the guy who makes the rest of us jump through hoops around here.

It’s a powerful weapon he’s handed off to the hundreds of thousands that we serve.

It’s been written here before how useful it is for our customers to follow Worldline on Twitter and on Facebook, because it gives them instant customer support – and that’s all true.

But giving them a direct connection to the head honcho?

Man, what was he thinking?

What he was thinking was this: We’ve made it way too hard for our customers to interact with us, and the opposite is true as well. We haven’t been taking advantage of our greatest resource, our customers, to improve the services we provide.

In 2013 we have committed ourselves to change. We are opening up as many avenues of access that we can, and in the coming months we be debuting a set of tools that will greatly improve the customer experience.

But in the mean time, drop us a line whenever you want, and give Jody a shout if you have a question or an issue.

If you do, it’s guaranteed it will never be ignored.

Contracts? We Don’t Need No Stinking Contracts!

nl-banfield-laurel-300-20130219Now this is the kind of news story we can really sink out teeth into!

We just hate national news stories that make our competition look like money grubbing scam artists… 

Courtesy of CBC News:

Laurel Banfield has a problem with her contract for home phone, cable TV and high-speed internet services — she didn’t even know she had one.

The company won’t give her anything in writing about it, and she is locked in for another eight months.

“It’d just be nice to have something in writing showing my obligations as a customer to Rogers,” Banfield said.

Last year, after she saw her bill go up a couple of times, Banfield called Rogers.

The agent applied some discounts to her services. That’s where the problem started.

By agreeing to those discounts, Banfield unwittingly entered into a contract. She says she’s since been told that the cancellation fees to get out of it are $60 per month. So she’s staying with Rogers until September.

“I guess I keep paying them until they tell me I don’t have to,” Banfield said.

Banfield isn’t the only person to get frustrated about tangly contract situations and unexpected fees.

Last year, the provincial government decided to take action to aid consumers.

The result, Bill 6, is aimed at making contracts easier to understand.

The law says fixed-term contract cancellation fees are capped at either $50, or the remaining portion of any discount offered on equipment. For example, a consumer signs a three-year contract for a $600 iPhone, but gets it for free. If they decide to end the contract a year early, they would be on the hook for $200 – the pro-rated portion of the phone’s value.

Under the law, the province can go to court on behalf of the consumer.

Good for them, but still, what a huge pain in the butt! Here’s an idea:

Why not sign up with a company that has no contract?

I can recommend a great one!

Working with the Mothership

BellCanada1902Having been established in 1880, Ma Bell was all on its own providing telephone service for more than 100 years. Essentially functioning as a monopoly, Bell Canada had virtually a 100% market share from sea to shining sea. That was until the 1980’s, when the federal government decided that for the country as a whole, and its people in particular, this probably wasn’t the greatest of ideas.

Competition, they decided, was a good thing.

And thus came the great telecommunications gold rush that lead to companies like Worldline’s parent company Fibernetics to be born. Fibernetics is something called a CLEC (pronounced Sea-Lek), which stands for “Competitive Local Exchange Carrier” and we are regulated by the CRTC. With our series of SS7 Quality switches installed across the county, we have direct connectivity into the heart of the transcontinental fiberoptic network.

What all that means is, we, just like Bell, are a phone and Internet company.

But we are unlike Bell in one very significant way. They had 100 years to wire up the country, spreading copper here, there and everywhere. Worldline has been around for 10 years, and for practical reasons we use the existing Bell infrastructure to get our services into your house.

Meaning that Bell, who is our direct competitor, is also a valued and essential partner.

Which is weird frankly.

As much as we’d like to trash Bell, how can we considering we couldn’t exist without those few meters of copper that they own that comes in off their pole into your place?

We can’t. We’re nice.

What we can do is tell you that, if you are a Bell customer, we can pretty much guarantee you are paying too much for your service. We know, because we know how much Bell charges us, and how much they are charging you – which is a lot!

The thing is, they have to charge you more than we do.

We don’t have any of that. We’re a lean, mean medium sized company focused on saving you money while providing a quality service.

Maybe one day we’ll have to worry about ratings on American Idol or how much money we lost on hosting the Olympics, but that won’t be for a while.

Until then we’ll just stick with what we’re good at.

Being nice.