5 reasons to use Madasafish broadband

March 22, 2007 by  

1. Customer Service Focus

Madasafish broadband are not a Service Provider that puts all their work into acquiring new customers and forgets about them as soon as they’ve signed up. Quite the opposite. They focus on providing an excellent service at all times. On the rare occasions when things do go wrong, They take personal responsibility for sorting them out.

2. Honesty and transparency

Madasafish broadband are completely transparent and honest when describing their package offerings. When you don’t have anything to hide it’s quite an easy policy to follow. They don’t say ‘unlimited’ and mean ‘so long as you don’t use it much’. They don’t say ‘free’ and mean ‘so long as you pay us lots of money for another service They provide’.

broadband are members of The Internet Services Providers’ Association (ISPA UK) and They abide by the ISPA UK Code. They are one of the first companies to sign Ofcom’s Broadband Industry migration code of practice which ensures fair treatment for customers who want to change broadband service provider. their focus is simply to provide top quality phone and Internet services.

3. Fanatical About Support

Whether you’re a Windows PC or Mac user, their technicians are fully trained to help you resolve any problems or queries you might have. And Madasafish broadband are here 24 htheirs a day, every day of the year, if you need us.

4. Value for money

Madasafish broadband services come with free connection and a free router. Monthly fees start at just £11.99 a month for speeds up to 8Mb. Switch your phone line rental to Madasafish for just £9.99 a month and you’ll get free evening and Theyekend calls. Includes excellent call rates to mobiles and international destinations.

5. Award winning broadband

They don’t like blowing their own trumpets (in fact there isn’t even a trumpet owner amongst us) but the last 12 months has been quite exciting for us. They’ve had to dust off their tuxedos and evening dresses on several occasions to go and take the plaudits.

At the 2007 Internet Service Provider Awards (or ISPAs, as they’re affectionately known) They received the award for “Best Consumer Email”. ISPA said;

“the judges felt that Madasafish’s email security and reliability reflects the vital role email now plays for consumers. The ease by which consumers are able to navigate Madasafish’s email interface using key commands was seen as a great feature.”

At the 2006 ISPAs Madasafish was the overall winner in the ‘Best Heavy Consumer Broadband’ category. An ISPA spokesperson said,

“The judges considered Madasafish to offer a great product which represents real value for money.” The judges also applauded Madasafish for offering an inclusive broadband service, which supports both Apple Mac and PC users.

The 2006 PC Pro Awards saw Madasafish Highly Commended in the ‘Best Broadband ISP’ category. The PC Pro awards Theyre voted for by the magazine’s readers. Madasafish was Highly Commended in both the ‘Customer Satisfaction’ and ‘Best Buy’ categories of the PC Advisor Broadband Awards. Again, based on the feedback of thousands of readers, these commendations really reflect their commitment to Customer Service and value for money.

Madasafish broadband grows since broadband MAC became mandatory

March 22, 2007 by  

Madasafish Broadband has reported a 30% increase in the number of broadband customers switching to their service since the change in regulations governing consumers’ rights in switching broadband providers.

On 14th February 2007, the industry regulator Ofcom made it mandatory for an ISP to issue a Migrations Authorisation Code (MAC) to broadband customers wanting to switch to an alternative broadband supplier. In the month following this decision, Madasafish broadband has noticed a dramatic increase in the number of customers migrating into their broadband service, with the number of new subscribers to the service increasing by almost a third from previous monthly sign-up figures.

Matthew Henton, Head of Marketing at Madasafish broadband said,

“It’s becoming clear under the new rules that ISPs which consistently ignore satisfaction levels and provide poor customer service are now being punished as consumers vote with their mouse – so to speak – and switch to better performing providers. We applaud Ofcom’s decision to enforce the MAC scheme as it gives broadband users the ability to change providers easily. ISPs with poor levels of customer satisfaction were typically not providing MAC codes, or even charging for them, because they had most to lose.”

Although many broadband ISPs, including Madasafish, had previously followed the voluntary scheme to make switching easy, some providers had simply refused to play fair. This forced Ofcom to act in the interests of broadband consumers and make the migration scheme compulsory.

BBC Watchdog broadband survey ‘misleading’

March 22, 2007 by  

According to Brightview (owener of Global Internet, Waitrose & Madasasfish broadband), the BBC Watchdog broadband survey* mislead viewers. The broadband company argues that the surver focused too heavily on the number of votes cast about a broadband provider, not the relative satisfaction of the various broadband supplier’s customers.

BBC watchdog cited as receiving the largest number of positive votes. However, Brightview said Watchdog failed to point out that BT also had the third highest number of dissatisfied customers.

Brightview said that the broadband survey

“doesn’t show how good BT’s broadband service is; it just shows how big BT is. Only 64 percent of the BT customers who voted were actually satisfied with their broadband service, ranking BT a lowly 20th out of the 29 providers in the survey,”

Global Internet (95 percent), Waitrose (94 percent) and Madasafish (91 percent) – all Brightview-backed ISPs – took three of the top four spots for customer satisfaction. Zen Internet (93 percent) was also in the top four, while Metronet (90 percent) came fifth.

David Laurie, chief executive of Brightview, said:

“Basing the programme’s results on volume of voters was the supreme example of the BBC’s ineptitude at managing a very important survey on broadband providers. It is Watchdog’s duty to inform the consumer, but by telling viewers that the ‘best’ provider of broadband also features as one of the worst, it only confused the issue and failed to make use of some valuable consumer data.

“The BBC’s ridiculous handling of the survey did nothing to reflect customer opinion, and misled consumers into believing that a provider which achieved a customer satisfaction significantly below average is the best.”


* Over 50,000 broadband user’s took part in the Watchdog broadband customer satisfaction survey.

Pipex broadband up for sale

March 21, 2007 by  

Well the number of UK households connected to the internet appears to be growing month on month. According to the latest stats from the government office of statistics, broadband usage is now up to 57% ( National Office of Statistics & lies – latest internet access figures).

And yet oddly while the number of UK households subscribing to broadband seems to be up, then number of companies supplying broadband seems to be shrinking. UK Broadband provider Pipex is now up for sale and the bidding war is intense.

It seems that the latest company having a look at Pipex to buy is Virgin media
. Virgin media as a new business is only 2-3 months old following the merger of NTL and Telewest into the Virgin brand. Both had shocking customer service so the marketing bods thought that under the Virgin banner they could convince their existing broadband customers to stick with Virgin while they sort through the problems of NTL and Telewest broadband.

It would intially seem odd that Virgin media would be looking to buy Pipex broadband before it has got its own house in order but there is a BIGGER picture. Only Virgin media and SKY can truly dominate in the new market paradigm of product bundling (broadband, telephone, and TV) and therefore will be looking to buy up the whole of the UK broadband market place. BT and the CarphoneWhareHouse could get a look in (they are both big after-all) but Virgin and Sky are the one’s to keep an eye on long-term.

We’ll keep track on the who’s going to get to buy Pipex. It might take a few weeks.

Amazing Pipex is up for sale really considering they themselves have been on the acquisition war-path over the last 18 months, buying up all the little broadband providers. It seems that only large broadband providers will survive in the long-run.

Broadband survey results – BBC Watchdog

March 21, 2007 by  

BBC Watchdog this evening published the results of its Broadband survey.

It ran the survey following complaints from the public surrounding poor customer service, reliability, and value for money. Interesting to note that the biggest player of them all – BT – ranked so well. They might be damned expensive but they do offer a easy to use service with great customer service and ease of broadand cancellation or migration.

The results of the survey are as follows:

THE BEST BROADBAND PROVIDERS (by number of votes *)

* There is a huge scew towards the big players in both the ‘best’ and ‘worst’ tables and the same broadband providers will appear in both lists.

[This table lists - in order of the total number of votes cast - the companies that, overall, viewers who took part in the survey were most happy with. It was calculated by adding together the 'satisfied' and 'extremely satisfied' ratings in each of the five categories. This total is the number listed after each company's name.]

Based on sum of 3s & 4s (satisfied, extremely satisfied)
1. BT – 18,862
2. Virgin – 17,881
3. AOL Europe -16,977
4. Tiscali – 11,973
5. TalkTalk -10,802
6. NTL – 10,399
7. Orange – 9,036
8. Telewest – 8,062
9. Sky – 6,202
10. Pipex – 5,772
11. Plusnet – 5,014
12. Zen – 4,742
13. Eclipse – 2,781
14. Demon – 2,515
15. Tesco – 2,216
16. Freedom2Surf – 2,160
17. Madasafish – 2,031
18. Nildram – 1,619
19. Waitrose – 1,308
20. Bulldog – 1,162
21. Supanet – 1,131
22. UK_Online – 987
23. ToucanSurf – 895
24. One.Tel – 585
25. Homecall – 528
26. Force 9 – 518
27. Metronet – 426
28. Biscit – 258
29. Global – 166

THE WORST BROADBAND PROVIDERS (by number of votes

This table lists – in order of the total number of votes cast – the companies that, overall, viewers who took part in the survey were least happy with. It was calculated by adding together the ‘extremely dissatisfied’ and ‘dissatisfied’ ratings in each of the five categories. This total is the number listed after each company’s name.

Based on sum of 1s & 2s (extremely dissatisfied, dissatisfied)
1. Orange – 12,313
2. TalkTalk – 11,944
3. BT – 10,669
4. Tiscali – 10,412
5. AOL Europe – 7,500
6. Sky – 6,525
7. Virgin – 6,306
8. Pipex – 4,083
9. NTL – 3,753
10. Plusnet – 2,109
11. Bulldog – 1985
12. Telewest – 1373
13. Biscit – 883
14. Eclipse – 869
15. ToucanSurf – 811
16. Demon – 738
17. Tesco – 555
18. Freedom2Surf – 469
19. UK_Online – 432
20. Supanet – 431
21. Zen – 371
22. Homecall – 326
23. One.Tel – 305
24. Force 9 – 229
25. Nildram – 256
26. Madasafish – 190
27. Waitrose – 80
28. Metronet – 47
29. Global – 8

Broadband Experiment: How to get your brand-new broadband domain indexed on Google

March 20, 2007 by  

Now this should be interesting. This is going to be a Google indexing test.

I had read somewhere recently about a quick fire way to get a newly registered domain indexed on Google. The article “How to get your website indexed on Google” suggested that if you were having trouble to get a new domain indexed on Google – eg. my new one, ‘go broadband’ – then you should set up a free blog on something like blogger.

You should then proceed to make a few posts about broadband over the period of a few days and wait for Google to find you new broadband blog. The Google robots should in theory wonder through the blogger index, find your broadband blog and then index the sites it finds you linking out to.

So here is my first test.

I have put some external links out to some broadband sites that I know are already indexed by Google and will then simply check their inbound referalls to see if this broadband blog gets indexed (probably a bit Naive considering Google only shows a small proportion of the inbound links to a website).

With any luck, if this broadband blog gets indexed and the sites I am linking to get indexed as well then there is no reason why the following domain shouldn’t get sucked up by Google too > hopefully under a keyword phrase to with comparing UK broadband providers. If that doesn’t work then we’ll try something else to help get me indexed.

Here’s hoping. I’ll post as soon as I get picked up. How exciting.

Broadband setup

March 20, 2007 by  

Well the Go-broadband blog is now up and running. Pretty straight-forward to edit within the pre-configured options.

If anyone sees this then please post a reply so I can find out how the post comments part works.

Thank-you

Go Broadband is … GO

March 20, 2007 by  

Welcome.

This is the first post of ‘Go broadband’ on blogspot.

The blog will be here at http://gobroadband.blogspot.com until I have fully tweaked the configurations of Blogger.

This site will move to live on http://www.go-broadband.co.uk

Thank you for dropping by.

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