An increasing number of Verizon Wireless customers at the end of their two-year contracts are suspended in time, unwilling to upgrade their phones because of costly mandated data plans that dramatically boost cellular phone bills, especially if everyone in the family wants an improved phone.
Kathy Vega, who lives in Rotterdam, N.Y., is just one example.
She complained to the Albany Times Union she’s effectively trapped with her old phone, an LG enV, because any upgrade will expose her to new mandatory data plans costing as much as $30 extra per month.
She’s been a satisfied Verizon Wireless customer for years. She also has Verizon Internet service, a Verizon e-mail address and a Verizon land line at home. She’s been a virtual walking, talking advertisement for the company’s products and services.
That’s why Vega was so irked by Verizon’s response when she tried to replace her enV phone and add a second one for her stepfather for free, thanks to a Father’s Day promotion the company was running.
Vega recalls that she was told that she’d have to pay another $30 each month for a “media pack” that would provide Internet and e-mail access.
It’s not clear to her now whether the additional price quoted to her was actually $30 per phone, which was her understanding at the time, or a total additional cost of $30 per month, based on a $9.99 data plan for each phone.
The Maroon enV model like hers on Verizon’s Web site now requires a data package costing “$9.99 or higher.”
The exact amount is almost irrelevant, as far as Vega is concerned. She just doesn’t see why she should have to pay for services she doesn’t use — especially since she wants the same phone she already has with no data charge.
[flv width=”480″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/Loyal Verizon customer laments plan – The Advocate 8-19-10.flv[/flv]
Kathy Vega explains her plight to the Albany Times Union Advocate. (1 minute)
Verizon Wireless, like AT&T, is increasingly exposing loyal customers like Vega to hidden rate increases in the form of mandatory service add-ons, in this case to cover data usage. While Verizon’s most basic cell phones are still free from these fees, the phones most popular with consumers these days all come with bill busting add-on requirements.
Vega pays $116 a month for cell phone service now. Verizon’s salespeople don’t always volunteer the company offers a lower usage data plan for $10, so assuming she follows the path laid before her by Verizon’s in-store staff, she could face quite a rate hike.
Confronted with her options, Vega is toughing it out with her current phone and an expired contract — like many other Verizon Wireless customers.
For those who have been loyal to Verizon for years, it’s galling to find higher priced monthly bills when it’s time to renew a contract and upgrade a phone.
Jen Smith said she was peeved when she learned of the new data program and associated costs.
“It’s sickening. I also hate that they have no customer loyalty. We have been with Verizon since they took over for Bell Atlantic Mobile in the area (~11 years ago). We have six phones and spend about $320 a month for them. You’d think we’d get a little better service for that, or a free accessory or some little perk, or heck, even a polite customer service specialist, but nope,” she writes.
Reader Sarah discovered the same thing, and she headed out the door to Sprint:
“This is exactly why I left Verizon over a year ago. I wanted a Palm. I didn’t want the data plan. Even though you can put a block on the phone to prevent the “unintentional use” of the data plan, they refuse to sell any smart phone without a data plan. So I had to go to Sprint. Can’t say I’m totally pleased with Sprint, but at least I could get what I wanted, and that was no data.”
For Verizon spokesman John O’Malley, it’s all a matter of doing some math.
He told the Times Union’s Cathy Woodruff, who serves as the newspaper’s consumer advocate, mandating data plans actually saves customers from unexpectedly high bills. He described circumstances where many owners of such devices had been racking up unexpected charges, suffering bill shock from Verizon’s punitive charge of $1.99 per megabite of data consumed.
“Customers who purchase these phones tend to take full advantage of the phone’s capabilities for surfing the Web, checking e-mail, etc.,” O’Malley said. “We’ve seen that those customers use an average of 17 megabytes of data per month. At our pay-as-you-go rate of $1.99 per megabite, that would cost them more than $30 a month.”
The $9.99 data feature provides up to 25 megabytes of data per month, which would cost nearly $50 under the old pricing policy, which makes the package “more cost effective,” he said.
Woodruff argued it won’t save any money for customers who don’t use data services.
But beyond that, we contend O’Malley’s math only works when using Verizon’s numbers.
It was Verizon Wireless that set the price of $1,990 per gigabyte of usage for “occasional users.” Had Verizon chosen pricing more reflective of its actual costs, consumers finding an extra dollar or two on their bill for a piddly 17 megabytes of data would still leave Verizon fat and happy, more than covering their costs. By inflating accidental and occasional use pricing into the ionosphere, O’Malley has a stronger argument to sell customers mandatory data plans that protect them from data pricing traps created by Verizon itself.
Overpricing data plans for loyal Verizon Wireless customers who can’t or won’t jump for joy at the prospect of spending $100 a month or more for a single cell phone with data service are now shopping around for better deals. Unfortunately, they won’t find them at AT&T, who generally charges the same prices Verizon does. But the financially-stressed consumer can find savings if they are willing to explore the second-tier of carriers, ranging from Sprint and T-Mobile and prepaid plans that require no contract.
Sprint is banking on Verizon and AT&T overplaying their hand and overcharging their customers. With Sprint’s newest handset hit — the HTV Evo, which also works on Sprint’s slowly growing 4G network, the company is attracting another look by advanced smartphone users. Sprint’s latest marketing also targets families weary of tricks and traps from their cell phone provider, especially usage-limits and allowances. Sprint bundles more services into its unlimited plans than other carriers, and its prepaid unit, Virgin Mobile, is no longer limiting wireless broadband usage on its 3G network.
Sprint’s biggest challenges to regain its top-tier footing come from years of bad customer service which company CEO Dan Hesse now assures is behind them, and a considerably more limited coverage area that simply cannot compare to AT&T and Verizon.
But for customers like Vega, being able to use the phone she wants and not pay gotcha fees for services she doesn’t use may be enough to compel a switch.
Verizon isn’t fooling her.
As Woodruff observes, “it seems foolish for Verizon to close out options for loyal customers, though, at a time when options can be such a strong selling point.”
“I just think (Verizon’s data package) is their way of building it to create more revenue, which I understand,” Vega told Woodruff, “but the customer should have a choice.”
She is so right.
Cathy Woodruff is known to Times Union readers as The Advocate. Cathy covers telecommunications issues regularly in her column which appears twice-weekly in the newspaper. She has covered the capital region of New York around Albany for more than 25 years, becoming The Advocate in July, 2009. She grew up in Herkimer County in upstate New York. Her column is highly recommended.
I will be in this boat in about 1 year. I have Verizon wireless. Given the current state of their plans I will not be staying with them. I use my phone as a, now get this…, telephone. It’s not an internet device for me and I don’t text. It’s easier to type 7 numbers and talk than type a small sentence and wait for a response.
I have used prepaid before and I will likely use it again.
Verizon’s been like that for a while with their data plans. If you got any phone which (mostly) came with a QWERTY Keyboard or ran Windows Mobile, you couldn’t get it without a data plan. That was 4 years ago. Today? Yes, any phone that can access the Internet or play music gets forced into a data plan. If you have older phones with them, they send you advertisements about new phones and all, through text messaging as well. Of course, anyone who keeps tabs on what Verizon is up to knows they’re in for a bill hike if they… Read more »
Try the LG Cosmo. If you don’t use the internet and data, but want a phone just like the EnV2 this is what you want. This is what my father uses and it works great for him (occasional texing, no data needed).
That’s great your father likes the Cosmo. My daughter likes her ENV3 and we have a 2 yr contract without Data so why are Cell Phone Companies now charging mandatory data charge associated with the exact same phone? She texts and I (as her parent) do not want her to have internet access on her phone. How can a company change the rules on a phone that one day doesn’t need data charges and the next day you have no choice. Again, same exact phone but different rules.
How can a company change the rules on a phone that one day doesn’t need data charges and the next day you have no choice.
Because they can
Phil nice touch the edit delete buttons at the bottom.
They did the same to us we upgraded from a HTC to a droid and wanted to use the HTC on one of our second lines and found that you could not use the HTC without data services. Even tho the HTC is wifi and does not need the cell network to surf and read email. The old HTC even has the ability to make a phone call to a ISP for data access. So now I can use the HTC to read email and surf on Wifi but can not use it as a phone. Does that make any… Read more »