Monday, June 4, 2007

Market Research Finds Opportunity to Improve Caller I.D.

DALLAS – June 4, 2007 – When the phone rings, we’re pretty used to knowing who’s calling, thanks to Caller I.D/ Calling Name services. By digging into their own databases and sometimes a few outside databases, carriers claim to provide us with the name and number of whoever is calling. But there are many instances when we see “unknown” or “unavailable” flash across the Caller I.D. Box. Can that be remedied? Just what is the market potential for carriers to improve Caller I.D. services to their customers? That’s what Accudata Technologies wanted to find out when it commissioned a national survey designed to answer just that.

The research study produced some surprising results. By using additional databases, including the database owned by Accudata, there is a potential to improve Caller I.D. services provided by carriers from the current rate of less than 48 percent of the time to more than 87 percent.

“Our Board of Directors was interested in determining the market potential for improving the performance of Caller I.D. services that carriers provide,” M. Gregory Smith, Accudata CEO, said. “Based on the results of this research, there is a large opportunity for Accudata to continue the record growth that it has experienced over the past five years.”

The survey also highlighted how little customers know about their Caller I.D. service. Most Caller I.D. subscribers (57 percent of respondents) aren’t sure how much they actually pay for the service because it is bundled with their phone service. And despite the fact that subscribers are getting Caller I.D. only 48 percent of the time, just 2 percent rated their service as poor.

“These numbers are significant because they show us that not only are most people unsure of what they’re paying for, they also just don’t know that they should get better service,” Smith said. “They’re satisfied with their Caller I.D. service because it’s all they know. But what if their caller I.D. service provided a calling name 87 percent of the time? The research really opened our eyes to just how much Accudata and other databases can help carriers improve their services.”

Caller ID Unavailable? click here to do something.....

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Consumers and Corporations Unite to Fight Telephone Companies Over Caller ID

Consumers for Fair Caller ID Service organization launches consumer advocacy blog

DALLAS - March 13, 2007 - If you were paying anywhere from $80 to $100 each year on a service, and you found out that the service provider wasn't supplying you with the service 100 percent of the time, you'd be upset, right? Maybe you should be sitting down. If you subscribe to a Caller ID service, you're probably getting cheated. And that's why Consumers for Fair Caller ID Service, a coalition of consumers and companies tired of paying Caller ID service fees without receiving the service, has started a grassroots effort to educate Caller ID users on the truth behind "Unavailable" and "Out of Area" calls.

The truth is that while we consumers are spending millions of dollars every year on Caller ID services, telephone companies aren't necessarily providing us with every name they are capable of getting. Caller ID works by matching the phone number of the person calling with a name that is stored in a database. When a number is stored outside a telephone company's database, that company has to purchase the information from another company that owns the database where the information is stored. Most every wireline telephone number is stored in one of these databases, but phone companies aren’t accessing every number.

Why not?

Typically, purchasing this information costs less than half a penny. But these big telephone companies don’t want to spend any money on their customers, which results in those "Unavailable" and "Out of Area" calls that show up on Caller ID displays. And because most consumers don't even know that their phone companies are capable of providing a higher level of service, they're letting the phone companies continue to profit off of them by providing sub-standard service. That's the purpose for the Consumers for Fair Caller ID Service blog - it's time for consumers to take a stand against these larger telephone companies.

The blog offers Caller ID consumers information on everything from how Caller ID works to contact information for the attorney general's office in each state. The blog includes broadcast and print news coverage from across the country. In addition, it provides users with a forum where they can come together and share their concerns, opinions and experiences. The blog was created both to educate consumers on what they should expect from their Caller ID service and to arm them with the information and strategies they will need to demand 100 percent service.

The blog can be accessed at http://calleridunavailable.blogspot.com/

About Consumers for Fair Caller ID Service
Consumers for Fair Caller ID Service is a coalition of consumers and companies that feel cheated for paying Caller ID service fees but not receiving calling names. Every year, Americans pay up to $120 each for Caller ID service but only get caller names on 30-70 percent of their calls. The technology to fix this problem is already in place. There’s no good reason that phone companies can’t provide it. We’re paying for Caller ID 100 percent of the time. Isn’t it time we got it?

Caller ID Unavailable? click here to do something.....

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

What Can You Do?

What can you do to get the Caller Id services you are paying for?

You can do three things;

  • #1 - Click Here to Add Your Name to Our Petition. (No Email Required)

  • #2 - Call your phone company provider and complain.
    Click Here to find your phone companies number.

  • #3 - Contact your state's Attorney General's Office and ask them what they are going to do to insure that you get the Caller ID Service you are paying for.

  • #4 - Contact your state's Public Utilities Commision - Click Here for FCC List.

  • Sunday, February 11, 2007

    Telephone Customer Help Lines

    Embarq (Sprint Residential Service)
    Customer Service #- 1-888-723-8010

    Verizon
    Repair #- 1-800-483-1000
    Customer Service #- 1-800-483-4000

    AT&T
    Repair #- 1-800-246-8464
    Customer Service #- 1-800-464-7920

    Qwest
    Product manager #- 1-800-423-8994

    Caller ID Unavailable? click here to do something.....

    Thursday, February 8, 2007

    Caller ID Display Terms

    These are the common terms that appear on the caller ID display when a name is not identified through a phone carrier.

    Unavailable – un-retrieved number, or truly unavailable
    Out of Area - un-retrieved number
    City, State - un-retrieved number, or truly unavailable
    Private Number - Permanently made private by the caller
    Private – made private by the caller
    Blocked – Name blocked by caller on a call-by-call basis.
    Wireless Call – mobile number
    Unknown Name – un-retrieved or truly unidentified number

    Caller ID Unavailable? click here to do something.....