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Archive for March, 2007

We Need Mandatory Disclosure of Data Breaches…..Now

March 30th, 2007 No comments

This story about TK Maxx is one of many, at the moment there is no legal obligation on companies in the UK to notify their customers of a data breach. In California, and soon across USA, this right of notification is mandatory. And I thought European privacy laws were supposed to be advanced……?

TK Maxx owner hit by card breach

Stores in the US, UK, Canada, Ireland and Puerto Rico are affected
Hackers have stolen information from at least 45.7 million payment cards used by customers of US retailer TJX, which owns TJ Maxx, and UK outlet TKMaxx.
In a statement to US watchdogs the firm said it did not know the full extent of the theft and its effect on customers.

TJX added that the security breach may also have involved TK Maxx customers in the UK and Ireland.

But the company did add that at least three-quarters of the affected cards had expired or data had been masked.

The company also told the BBC that 100 files were moved from its UK computer system in 2003, and two files were later stolen.

Question marks

However, a spokesperson admitted that the firm may never know what was in those files.

“We don’t know what was in those files – the technology the hacker used prevents TJX from knowing, and also the fact that TJX system routinely deletes files,” the spokesperson added.

The data was accessed on TJX’s systems in Watford, Hertfordshire, and Massachusetts over a 16-month period from July 2005 and covers transactions made by credit and debit card dating as far back as December 2002.

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Categories: Brickbats, Privacy, Supplier Management Tags:

Virgin Media v Sky

March 26th, 2007 No comments

Thankfully i’m not affected by this spat.

Looks like the previously tefal-like Mr (Sir) Branson has landed right in it this time – no excuse for not anticipating the upturn in service requirement.

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British Gas (again)

March 23rd, 2007 No comments

Well, despite being promised the money they owed me (£190) 2 weeks back, still no sign of it – incompetence, or deliberate sharp practice?

The latter would seem more true to type, they seem to be doing the same on pricing.

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….and why are we surprised about bank behaviour?

March 22nd, 2007 No comments

This article just begs to be read time and again…..

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/6476155.stm

Mis-selling is ‘rife’ at Barclays

By Amanda Egbujo
Undercover reporter, BBC Whistleblower

A nine-month investigation by BBC reporters working undercover in a leading British bank has revealed a culture of ruthlessness and lies which will shock their customers.

Barclays says that it treats customers fairly

BBC1′s Whistleblower

With a touch of glee, my bank trainer told a classroom full of call centre trainees that he “loved” getting customers complaining about bank charges.

“They’d phone up, start crying and blaming you and telling you their kids are going to starve. And I’d be like, ‘I don’t know you – I don’t care’. I was just thinking ‘you’re not getting it back’. I was a right git.”

This was an early insight into how life might be working inside a Barclays call centre in Doxford, Sunderland.

I have been undercover in one of the top British banks for the last five months – and it has been an extraordinary experience.

I’ve seen customers misled, lied to and treated with contempt.

I’ve seen people charged for financial products they neither asked for or knew they had.

And in a separate investigation I’ve also seen evidence of bank employees working with criminals to commit fraud.

People know we are a good bank, we’re trustworthy, we do the right thing, we treat people with respect
Barclays spokesman

All this in an industry which claims it operates to the highest standards of care and trust.

At the call centre in Doxford I was one of 1,800 people who work day in, day-out selling Barclays’ products.

Staff often gave the impression that customer service lay at the bottom of everything we did. But that wasn’t always the case.

The lie began the minute we got through to the customer. “Hello, my name is Amanda Egbujo and I’m an account consultant.”

I wasn’t anything of the sort of course. I was employed as a “sales adviser”. But as one of my colleagues told me: “You have to lie a lot,” if you want to get into the call for long enough to start selling.

Yet banks are supposed to operate under strict rules imposed by the Financial Services Authority to prevent customers being misled.

‘Cynical attitude’

But this cynical attitude to sales – and to customers – permeated every aspect of my work with the bank – both in the call centre and later when I transferred to a high street branch of the bank in Guildford, Surrey.

As my trainer Simon Pickergill said: “I hate it when they say the customer is always right. It’s just ridiculous. Someone was stoned when they made up that policy.”

Remember this isn’t just anyone, this is a man who Barclays had chosen to teach us, the bank’s new staff, how to behave.

Barclays, like most banks, has a system of targets and bonuses to encourage its staff to sell.

I hate it when they say the customer is always right. It’s just ridiculous
Simon Pickergill
Barclays’ trainer

I saw the effects of the ruthless target-driven environment.

In just four weeks in my branch, I saw one of my colleagues break down in tears because of the pressure to sell and I heard about another from a different branch being suspended, accused of a series of misdemeanours – including moving more than £200,000 from one customer’s account to another, without permission, purely so he could get commission.

Mis-selling seemed to be rife.

One manager admitted that the bank’s “Additions” accounts are one of the “most mis-sold” products in the bank.

Additions’ accounts can cost around £150 a year, in exchange for which the customer gets a range of benefits.

They are worthwhile for some customers, but even more worthwhile for the bank – raking in tens of millions of pounds a year.

To encourage us to sell them we are paid a bonus of £10 for each one we sell.

The problem is that if the customer already has an account with us they don’t have to sign for the new account.

And as the manager explained it often happens that staff, under pressure to sell, simply give the customer an Additions account without telling them and many may not notice the extra charge on their account for months.

‘Not representative’

Indeed just a week after that manager described this to me, I was there when an angry couple came into my branch complaining that just that had been done to them.

Just a few weeks ago Barclays announced record profits of £7 billion.

What I saw there makes me feel very uneasy about how they made at least some of that money.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/6476155.stm

In response to our allegations Barclays Bank said: “We are not in the business of encouraging or condoning mis-selling or inappropriate sales in any way whatsoever, and we stamp on that when we find it because it is completely inappropriate behaviour for a bank.

“We pride ourselves on being a responsible institution that puts its customers first.”

It added: “People know we are a good bank, we’re trustworthy, we do the right thing, we treat people with respect.

“I don’t think what you’ve seen is any way representative of the way in which Barclays does business, and I’m sure our millions of customers would tell you exactly the same thing.”

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Categories: Supplier Management, Trust, VRM Tags:

The UK Government Enters The Data Services Industry

March 20th, 2007 No comments

I see that they plan to recoup some of the cost of ID cards by selling identity checks to industry.

That’s fine – I assume there will be an accompanying service through which the individual can use their own identity for free – or get a cut of the action?

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Identity and VRM

March 18th, 2007 No comments

Nice post here by Whit B McNamara on why single seller-centric suppliers (in this case Amazon) cannot build a comprehensive ‘view of the customer’……and thus sub-optimise all of the many things that they would wish to do with that single view.

So – to spell out that problem in more detail; with this flawed ‘customer view’:

- their segmentation will be sub-optimal
- their pricing will be sub-optimal
- their contact strategy will be sub-optimal

These are three very big chunks of a customer management budget – and when you consider that Amazon has a vastly better customer view/ ability to use it than most, then what state are the others in? …..All of course evidenced by the very poor response rates to direct marketing campaigns.

The solution – individual (user)-centric identity, and providing the inidividual with the tools and process to gather their own ‘view’ of themselves, and to make that available to their preferred suppliers. This will take some time to emerge, but when it does it will revolutionise the customer/ supplier relationship.

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Categories: People, Privacy, Supplier Management Tags:

Photos on Google Maps

March 18th, 2007 No comments

Check out this great new feature on Google Maps – businesses can now upload photos to their location data.

I wonder how long it will be before Google is the dominant business diectory service?????

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Categories: Bouquets, Supplier Management Tags:

HSBC Online Banking Shambles

March 17th, 2007 No comments

I just tried to log on to my First Direct online bank account only to get this message:

important information
sorry, first direct is currently unable to support access to our internet banking service through the Safari browser. We are working hard to fix this.

We recommend that you install Firefox (version 1.5 or higher) so that you can access our internet banking service. This is available at www.mozilla.com.

We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause and appreciate your patience.

I read on silicon.com that this was an un-anticipated issue emerging from a identity/ security upgrade that affects 3% of their 700k customers. That is probably the same identity/ security upgrade that caused me to put the phone down on the tech support person I spoke to last week about not being able to access my business bank account, despite having been able to do so for the last 5 years without any problem.

Anyway – not noticing that 21,000 First Direct customers were using Safari seems pretty naive to me. I used to be a strong advocate of First Direct, but over the last year I just get the sense they are getting dragged back into ‘business as usual’ for HSBC, i.e. just the same poor service and lack of interest in customer needs as all the other major banks.

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March is the end of summer according to British Gas..

March 12th, 2007 No comments

Here’s there explanation today of why my account is sitting £150 in credit and has been for months. They are so crap I think i’ll leave them…..ooops, I forgot that I did – over 6 weeks ago, and the switch is still working its way through the system.

What a **** set up.

Dear Mr Henderson
Thank you for your enquiry regarding the credit on your account. I am very sorry that you did not receive a prompt reply to this email. Unfortunately, British Gas has been receiving unusually high volumes of email and as a result our responses are taking a bit longer than the usual 24 hours that we aim for.
We always expect you to be credit at the end of summer when you are on a monthly payment scheme. You will then find that the credit will then be used to supplement the winter usage when you will be using the majority of your annual usage of gas. If you are still in credit, by over £50.00, in one months time when you are due for your annual reassessment this will automatically be refunded back into your bank account

I trust that this has fully answered your enquiry, if you require further help please contact house via email at house@house.co.uk or contact us on 0845 600 5001*.

Kind Regards

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BT Charging for Non Direct Debit Payments

March 10th, 2007 No comments

One can only hope that this comes back to haunt them.

£4.50 – I can’t see how they arrived at that charge, seems way to high. I’d like to think the government will clamp down on this practice before consumers have to do it themselves (as they did with exhorbitant bank charges).

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Categories: Brickbats Tags:
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