On Saturday October 13 2007 12:47 pm, Doug Lytle wrote: > John Millican wrote: > > On Saturday October 13 2007 12:09 pm, Lee Jenkins wrote: > > > > Be sure to read the fine print as most of the "unlimited" plans do > > actually have a limit on usage (even the ones I offer). Some are out in > > the open some > > Then don't advertise it as *unlimited* > > Seems simple, doesn't it? > > Doug
Doug, You are absolutely correct, it should be simple but... When you are trying to market a product and are competing in a market littered with limited unlimited plans and knowing that these are the key words that a lot of people look for, the other partner in the company said "we have to have an unlimited plan". Long hard battle ensued but we came to an agreement. Okay, but we will call it the Unlimited3000 (yes pretty cheesy I know) plan and spell it out clearly in the contract also. Also if you left the rest of the post in you would see that I said I usually steer people away from these plans into a per minute as most people do not get close to 3000 minutes a month. Yes, there are those that do but not the majority. My apologies if anyone feels this is to close to a commercial post but I felt I should answer. JohnM _______________________________________________ --Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com-- asterisk-users mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users