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Ignored again by TalkTalk

Billx
Super Duper Contributor
Private Message TalkTalk
Message 33 of 33

I give 2 pictures from my last 2 bills:

 

From bill of 01/08/2024

Billx_0-1725225475093.png

 

From bill of 01/09/2024

Billx_1-1725225526564.png

 

I am currently conducting an official complaint.

It has been going on for over 5 months

 

On the 09/07/2024, the Case Managers, then dealing with my complaint, thought it was a good idea to give me a bribe, so that I might stop annoying them. So, without my consent, they credited some account, I don't know which, but apparently it belonged to me, and credited me with £ 70, representing 2 months of free broadband service. I found out about it, protested, and told them I would never accept that. On the 02/08/2024, I rang 0345 172 0088, more than once, and impressed upon customer service, that this must not go ahead, or if it had gone ahead, customer service must reverse their accounting entry. Eventually customer service agreed that they would do so, and they assured me that they would do so. Obviously, looking at the above pictures, they have not done so. This compounds my original complaint.

(Also, there is at least one missing direct debit from my bank account.)

(Also, the way TalkTalk expresses itself on its bills, its very hard to tell whether it is debiting or crediting some internal TalkTalk account, or whether it is debiting or crediting one's bank account.)

 

Anyhow, I now ask customer service to immediately do so now. I.E. Reverse that £70 entry.

If your computer doesn't allow you to do that, then I would politely suggest, throw your computer away, and perhaps get another one.

 

Respectfully,

Bill

 

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32 REPLIES 32

Billx
Super Duper Contributor
Private Message TalkTalk
Message 21 of 33

@Gliwmaeden2 

Forgive me. I'm not being argumentative. Just expanding a bit.

Your second description of what has happened and what will happen within Myaccount is 101% spot on. Thank you.

What is clear from your description is that TalkTalk creates a special 3rd account to put any customers credits in, IE The £70 went to its own account.  So now there are 3 accounts involved. The main MyAccount, the special credits account and the customers Bank account.

That makes it mighty complex. When it's time to finalize at the end of the month, it somehow tries unsuccessfully to recombine its 2 internal accounts.

 

Anyway, the way things are dealt with in accounting, is to use the magic words 'Brought forward' and 'Carried forward'

One brings forward at the beginning of the month what was currently owed by the customer to the supplier, or what was currently owed by the supplier to the customer. Nowhere do these magic words appear in TalkTalk's bill.

The same applies at the end of the month, using 'Carried forward', so everyone knows, at the end, what is owed and to whom

I.E. There's no need to create a special credits account.

 

The other issue which came up before, the use of '-' and '+', can be avoided by using the other magic words, 'DR' and 'CR'

Thank you for your attention.

 

Bill

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Billx
Super Duper Contributor
Private Message TalkTalk
Message 22 of 33

@Gliwmaeden2 

I understood you the first time you explained it to me. And yes, that made sense.

But what doesn't make sense is how it is presented by TalkTalk in the customers bill. No one can make any sense of it without somehow referring it to you. And to understand the somersaults TalkTalk goes through to arrive at the end result.

And I got a bit angry at @AllyM , because he was trying to teach me how things are in the world.

 

Thanks, You didn't have to reply again

Bill

 

Message 23 of 33

@Billx, if you paid £35 on 9th July by DD, that presumably shows as deducted from your bank account?

 

It's the same day that the £70 was credited. 

 

So 1st August bill was definitely taken 9th August from the £70.00.

 

You can double check that if no £35.00 taken from your bank account. 

 

This month's bill: 1st September. Remaining £35.00 likely to be used up to cover the forthcoming month.

 

So October 1st: due around 9th, by DD.

 

Whichever dates the bill refers to, just crosschecking with your bank statement should surely confirm which dates were covered.

Gliwmaeden2, a fellow customer.
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Billx
Super Duper Contributor
Private Message TalkTalk
Message 24 of 33

Please look at the first picture showing what happened last month. It's absolute gibberish.

There are no dates. There's no 'Brought forward' or 'carried forward'. So there is no way I can add or subtract whatever figures are there, to come to a final sum. No final sum is shown. I was being kind calling it accounting practice.

 

In the second picture there are 2 entries -35 and -35 which should make a final sum of -70. What the f... is that supposed to be?

Do I owe £70 or am I owed £70? Neither.

 

Bill

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AllyM
Philosopher
Private Message TalkTalk
Message 25 of 33

It's not TalkTalk's accounting practice @Billx . it's the way the whole global financial system works.

It is assumed that you understand that a bill is money you owe a company for goods and/or services supplied and it is simply shown as a positive value. Any negative numbers will be discounts, refunds, change given etc. I'm sure if you look at and bill you've received from any company, invoices for goods purchased, till receipts etc, you will see that they all use that terminology.

 

A bank account statement is not a good comparison to make as it simply lists transactions of money going in and out of your account - It is not a bill or invoice.

 

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Billx
Super Duper Contributor
Private Message TalkTalk
Message 26 of 33

@Gliwmaeden2 

I don't use credit car.ds much. But it seems particularly stupid that credit card companies, who are financial companies like banks, are doing this.

It might seem that credit card companies are purposely showing their customers in the black, when their customers are in the red.

Also credit cards are no different from debit cards used by banks, they have exactly the same purpose, to reduce a customers credit balance, i.e. to move the customer more into the negative. And so credit cards have been misnamed from the beginning.

 

And thanks for explaining TalkTalk's accounting practice. But one would have to be a mind reader to work it out oneself.

 

Bill

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Message 27 of 33

Exactly,  because it's credit it shows the other way around. 

 

Go tell them then, if you don't like it. I did very carefully say credit card statements, NOT bank account statements!

Gliwmaeden2, a fellow customer.
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Billx
Super Duper Contributor
Private Message TalkTalk
Message 28 of 33

Ah, @Gliwmaeden2 

You mentioned credit card account.  Maybe the credit card people do it the opposite way. If they do,  they better change it and do it properly.

 

Bill

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Billx
Super Duper Contributor
Private Message TalkTalk
Message 29 of 33

No, @Gliwmaeden2 

When you have a bank account, it is in the black or in credit or positive.

If you overdraw you're in the red or in debit or in debt or negative.

Also accounts are always shown from the customers point of view.

 

You've got it the wrong way round.

 

Bill

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Message 30 of 33

Your ordinary credit card account would also show a minus in the statement when it's in credit / something is credited back, @Billx. You can't "owe" a negative number, they owe it to you.

 

When you are in debt that's shown as a positive amount, which is what you are more used to seeing in a bill, of course.

 

Takes a bit of getting the head around.

Gliwmaeden2, a fellow customer.
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Billx
Super Duper Contributor
Private Message TalkTalk
Message 31 of 33

Its amazing how you worked all that out so quickly, @Gliwmaeden2 . That explains it a bit.

 

I always have thought '-' represents debit or subtract. Perhaps they should say debit or credit, so we all know..

TalkTalk didn't subtract, it added. Still, one doesn't know whether they referring to an internal TalkTalk account or the bank account.

I thought this was sorted via customer service, because customer service assured me. In other words they had authority from the Case Managers.

 

Yes, off course I didn't accept it. I still don't. I made it very clear above and why I don't accept it.

 

Thanks,

Bill

 

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Gliwmaeden2
Community Star
Private Message TalkTalk
Message 32 of 33

The minus sign means it's been credited, @Billx.

 

Looks like you still have credit of£35.00 in My Account. They have taken the £35.00 from the £70 and there's still £35.00 left to cover the bill.

 

They won't take money by DD while it's sitting as a credit in My Account as they always use up the credit first.

 

You have the option just to move it from My Account to your bank to resume the normal DD payment for the bill.

 

Talktalk doesn't send money directly to a customer's bank account - only to My Account, so you can choose to claim it back or put towards the bills.

 

So that explains how these things work, but you didn't want to accept the £70.00 as a resolution?

 

This is still a matter between yourself and the Case Managers.

 

Gliwmaeden2, a fellow customer.
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