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mattwnz

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#321545 27-Aug-2025 20:52
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I recently had to move ISP after Slingshot increased their prices inside the contract period. So I decided on Sky and signed up via their website. Skys signup website told me that they could see that I already had fibre at my address, so I expected it would be a simple transfer after filling in the form.

 

I arranged the date to be 5 days before my next billing period with Slingshot. Near the date I emailed Slingshot to let them know I was moving ISP and told them it was Sky, including the address and account details etc . I also emailed them a few days after the switch as I hadn’t heard back from them.  However I was previously told that when a transfer occurs, the old ISP will be notified automatically and will cancel the account, and that was confirmed by Slingshot as well.

 

 I however have just received a bill from Slingshot and they haven’t canceled my account even though my internet is now with Sky. They have told me that Sky have set up my Internet on LAN2, and my existing connection is on LAN1, and Sky have set it up as a new connection instead of a transfer, so I now have two internet connections and paying for both. When I contacted Sky they said that Slingshot should have told them that it was a transfer.  Slingshot have said that Sky should have done it as a transfer, not as a new connection. So they are blaming one another.

 

I asked a Sky manager to phone me back as I couldn’t get a straight answer why it hadn’t been processed as a transfer.  I was told one would phone in a hour as they were all in meetings,  but they didn’t get back to me. When I phoned back to find out why I hadn’t been contacted, I was told that their managers only work until 4pm and had now left.  This is the 2nd time in a row when I have changed ISP, where  it has gone wrong and ended up wasting hours of my time to sort out. Last year I ended up without internet for a day after the transfer to Slingshot went wrong. I did contact Chorus about what process SKy should have followed but there doesn’t appear there are any standards or processes that ISPs must follow when it comes to transferring a fibre connection.

 

Anyone know who is actually at fault here?  Last time I did a transfer last year,  Chorus emailed me a feedback form and wanted to know how the transfer process went. I told them about the problems and they said they would look at improving things.  But when I phoned them today the woman I spoke to didn’t seem very interested and said Chorus only deals with physical ONT installations,  and said it was an issue with the ISPs


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freitasm
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  #3407956 27-Aug-2025 21:27
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Cancel Slingshot. Don't expect Sky to do it now. Theclonger you take, the more you pay.





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freitasm
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  #3408740 30-Aug-2025 11:35
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mattwnz:

 

Yes hours wasted on the phone talking to many different people via their offshore call centre and trying to get is escalated to a resolution. I would say I wasted over 3 hours in total over the last week . Again you are blaming the customer by saying to choose another ISP next time. But if it had been processed correctly then it would not have been an issue.   Your suggestions about the process also appears to contradict the advice on this page in regard to doing an in-flight transfer. https://www.geekzone.co.nz/forums.asp?forumid=49&topicid=312400    There appears to be two ways to do it and it certainly isn’t consumer friendly. Hence why I believe it needs to be regulated to avoid these problems, and yes peope do have problems otherwise that thread wouldn’t have been created

 

 

In regards to your comment "There appears to be two ways to do it and it certainly isn’t consumer friendly. Hence why I believe it needs to be regulated to avoid these problems"

 

I don't think it needs regulation. And I don't think it's something a customer can see coming because most of the times customers don't know how internal process works. 

 

You gave one data point, your personal anecdote on moving from Slingshot to Sky. So I will give you two datapoints, on moving from 2degrees to Quic.

 

I requested a new connection with Quic on a Saturday afternoon and two hours later my connection was transferred. It was so seemless that we were watching a movie on Netflix and it never stopped (the streaming device should have enough to cove the few seconds of the connection change). I only knew it switched because I saw an alert on my connection monitor.

 

Th other was a change requested 6 PM on Sunday, completed 8 PM Sunday. Again, almost seamless change.

 

In both cases I had a box on the form asking if I wanted to use an existing port or use the second port. Also, in both cases I logged into those 2degrees accounts and the connection was gone. I didn't even have to call 2degrees.

 

My point is that each ISP is different and you were unluck to switch to one that doesn't have their processes correctly in place.

 

This is not reason for regulations though. This is a company problem, not an industry problem.

 

The time spent on this discussion could be a lot less if the customer just called the losing ISP and cancelled the account, chalking it up to lesson learned.





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