Promo: NCC blanket ban may be a ruse – Subscribers

December 11, 2012 3 Comments »
Promo: NCC blanket ban may be a ruse – Subscribers

BY BISI OLALEYE

Following the recent ban on consumer promotions and lotteries by telecommunications operators almost five weeks ago by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC),an increasing number of phone users are lamenting their ordeal while also not sure what NCC tends to achieve. Some of them disclosed that the ban has not brought about any noticeable improvement in the quality of service and that subscribers  are the real losers as they no longer enjoy freebies from telecom operators.

Other school of thought hinted that the blanket ban was over playing to the gallery as NCC had just conducted yet another quality of service check on the operators in line with its mandate which empowers the regulatory agency to ensure that the licensees meet required standards from time-to-time.

“The outcome of the survey did not seem to have influenced the decision of the NCC in deciding on a blanket ban on promotions and lotteries which affected all operators, irrespective of their performance as discovered by NCC itself,” said Moses Adigun, a consumer rights activist. It will be recalled that NCC conducted what is known as Nationwide Benchmark Drive Test for the four major operators – MTN, Globacom, Airtel and Etisalat between July and September this year.

The first of its kind, the test captured the Call Completion Rate, which encompasses the major network KPI (call drop and congestion). Service providers were ranked in Lagos and the six geo-political zones of South-West, South-East, South-South, North-Central, North-East and North-West. The survey showed that some operators indeed have more than enough capacity to absorb any increase in patronage resulting from their promotional activities.

“From such a quality of service check, analysts had thought NCC would apply its own prescription in dealing with the subscribers’ headache. Rather, the agency chose to come down hard on all the operators. The indefinite ban on all promotions and lotteries by network operators has continued to generate divergent opinions,” one industry analyst said.

Not a few subscribers believe that NCC should have taken the pains to sanction only those networks that have demonstrated lack of capacity to handle the increased traffic on the platforms as a result of the consumer promotions.

A marketing communications consultant, Mr. Wale Thomas, opined that the NCC was behaving like most establishments in Nigeria that would always look for the easy way out of any challenge. “Why would NCC institute a check on the network and refuse to implement the result of its own findings in dealing with culprits? “The agency should have imposed the ban on networks that have failed to meet minimal standards rather than sweep all of them along.”

Commenting on the blanket ban, Mr. Moses Akapo,  a mobile phone dealer at the Computer Village in Ikeja, Lagos, urged  NCC to encourage the spirit of competition among the network operators, which would ultimately be to the benefits of the consumer. “If one or two network operators are found wanting and the NCC choose to impose the same penalty on all the licensees, it would be encouraging mediocrity rather than promoting meritocracy,” Akapo said. In a recent interaction with journalists, the Association of Licensed Telecoms Operators of Nigeria (ALTON), had pointed out that issue of network congestion cannot be blamed on consumer promotions and lotteries.

According to ALTON President, Mr. Gbenga Adebayo, the major causes of poor service quality across networks could be attributed to natural and man-made disasters. He explained that the natural disaster of flooding in some southern parts of the country and the spontaneous attacks on telecoms facilities in some northern parts of the country by gunmen had contributed largely to service disruption.

According to Adebayo, “The impacts of the attacks had since limited the ability of millions of Nigerian subscribers to access telecommunications services, because the incidents affected over 250 telecoms sites that lost connection and many suffered significant damage beyond repairs.”

The ALTON President noted that the unprecedented flooding in some parts of the country destroyed Base Transceiver Stations (BTS) along its path, leading to significant service disruption in the affected areas, with consequential impact on service availability in some other parts that were not affected by the flood.

“Other than disruption to services, our members have lost equipment worth several billions of naira to the flood disaster across the country, as over additional 300 BTS sites were affected by the flood,” he said. Announcing the ban on consumer promotions and lotteries on the networks on November 8, NCC said it would be in force “until such a time as may be determined by the commission.”

The regulatory agency said that the affected telecoms operators included Globacom Limited, MTN, Intercellular Nigeria Plc, Visafone Communications Limited, Etisalat, Airtel and Multilinks Telecoms Limited.


3 Comments

  1. TEE December 11, 2012 at 10:05 am - Reply

    FOOLS FOOLING THE FOOLS. People lets talk about money making & helping ourselves, Pls join the Nigerian Facebook where u make money on everybody u invite. There’re 2 many poor pple in this country, coming together, we can rescue many. YOU CAN MAKE A LOT OF MONEY PAID DIRECTLY 2 UR BANK ACCOUNT EVEN IN NIGERIA. Just click & register free: http://www.netcontacts.com.ng/invitation/?invitationcode=7857022625

  2. muhammed unuarumhi December 11, 2012 at 10:36 am - Reply

    please NCC look at d real problems & services can be improved at affordable rate.

  3. klifford December 11, 2012 at 7:01 pm - Reply

    Talk of voice clarity Airtel has it.followed by Glo.Etisalat and Mtn should do something in this respect.

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