You know, I'm a fairly easy-going person. If someone phones and tells me they aren't selling anything, I believe them. If they ask if I can answer a few questions I usually say yes.
But is there any point in asking questions if you aren't going to listen to the answers? I couldn't even get him to accept my name; he had me down as P. Kennedy, therefore I couldn't be saying "David", I must be saying "Peter", even when I spelt it out for him. When he kept asking me to confirm I had £5,000 debt, while I was practically shouting down the phone "No! I have no debts!" I just had to hang up.
Edit: Come to think of it, I'm sure Mum's signed us up for something which means we're not supposed to get calls like that.
But is there any point in asking questions if you aren't going to listen to the answers? I couldn't even get him to accept my name; he had me down as P. Kennedy, therefore I couldn't be saying "David", I must be saying "Peter", even when I spelt it out for him. When he kept asking me to confirm I had £5,000 debt, while I was practically shouting down the phone "No! I have no debts!" I just had to hang up.
Edit: Come to think of it, I'm sure Mum's signed us up for something which means we're not supposed to get calls like that.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-18 06:28 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-18 07:05 pm (UTC)He called again and my Mum answered (actually, he called again several times while she was at work and I didn't answer, but I forgot to warn her about it). This time he skipped that question, presumably because of my reaction to it. She says the rest of it was the usual stuff about do you have Sky, and what leccy company are you with (and the dreaded question "Would you like to recieve information about..." to which the answer is always "No.")
no subject
Date: 2009-08-20 10:22 am (UTC)Because the guy I spoke to phoned again yesterday morning, when I was expecting a call from my sister. This time the line was a bit clearer and I managed to get him to understand I didn't have any debts (and my partner didn't have any debts either because I didn't have a partner) and he went away.
And then he phoned again five minutes later with almost exactly the same speil, except this time he went into further detail about what a debt was, just in case I was misunderstanding him ("credit cards, loans, mortgages, anything like that"), and after asking about my partner again, also asked about family and friends (to which I replied more-or-less honestly "I don't know").
I suspect that, if the answer had been yes, this "survey" would have turned out to be on behalf of one of those "consolidate all your existing debts into one great big dept" companies.