Question:

How do you deal with telemarketers?

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I am really tired of them calling my house phone any ideas?

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11 ANSWERS


  1. Yes. When they call, tell them you just got the number and that they are lucky they caught you home because you normally are at work and you usually use this particular line for faxes.  (This works best with evening calls) Tell them you are on your way out but would they please call you. They will want  your personal information. Grab a phone book and pick a random name. Use that name and then, when you are asked for the BEST number to call you at.. use thiers and then pick a very early time (7 AM) or very late time (11 pm) for them to call you back. Youll bask in the glory of knowing that the schmoo telemarketer is going to call and catch h**l.. Too bad you cant listen in, huh?


  2. Tell them to please stop calling. If it continues then get angry with them and threaten to sue the living shix out of them.

  3. Ooh, it's so much fun messing around with them!

    Like this one time...a telemarketer called my teacher

    and was offereing like this celephone deal

    and my teacher said "No thanks man, I got a seventeen year

    contract. And I mean...you don't speak good english

    so you might rip me off"

    But if you just want to get rid of them all together

    A.) Get caller ID

    B.) When you pick up the phone and say hello and

    you hear it's a telemarketer, just hang up don't even say goodbye.

    If you do that enough to the same one...they stop calling.


  4. hang up its that EASY..

  5. In the UK there is the Telephone Preference Scheme which allows you to opt out of receiving this type of telephone call.  It is free and it works.

  6. I don't answer a call from a number I don't recognize.

  7. Pick up, tell them off, hang up. I know its sad to hang up on someone, but its also sad when your job is about you annoying people at home and work by doing something even you would get pissed off if it happend to you. Tell them to take your number off the callers list, if its the same people calling, and tell them you tell the police for harassment. Or just dont pick up strange phone numbers unless theyve called left a message beforehand.

  8. yell into the phone and say, "shut the h**l up!" trust me, i do this and they NEVER call again, well not the same ppl at least. or if u want to be more polite, just hang up on them rite away or say ur no interested and for them to not call again.

  9. 1st. Subscribe your number here:

    https://www.donotcall.gov/

    2nd. Hang up when you get a call.

  10. get on the dont call list then when they call (after your on the dont call list) remind them im on your dont call list if the conitue calling talk to a manager or someone high up and say im on the dont call list quit calling me or ill call my lawer and take you to court belive it on not that works :)



  11. The world of telemarketing has evolved from the tradition of sitting down to dinner and being disturbed by a telemarketer wanting "just a few minutes of your time" for a survey, or to ask you to donate to their cause, or to sell you something you probably don't need.

    These days, you often aren't even being called by a human being; a computer calls. You say "hello", and hear dead air. Against your better judgement, you say "hello" again, and hear that ominous click. Then if you're lucky you will hear a live person's voice as the computer that called you clicks over to the next available operator. But sometimes, as if to add insult to injury, you will be informed by an electronic voice that "abc" company is trying to reach you and that an operator will be with you shortly. Cue in the elevator music.

    Meanwhile, dinner is getting cold.

    You don't have to succumb to this invasion any longer.

    A single toll-free call or visit to the Federal Trade Commission website can remove you from all professional telemarketing companies' lists nationwide. Visit them here or call them at 1-888-382-1222.

    Every 31 days, telemarketers must update their Do Not Call lists from the national registry, so within a month the dinnertime disturbances will subside. Your name will stay on the list for five years, at which time if you notice an influx of calls you can renew your listing.

    For more information, check out FTC's website.

    You're not out of the woods yet though! You might still be contacted by research surveys, charities, political parties, long distance phone companies, airlines, insurance companies, or companies with whom you have had recent dealings.

    However if you receive said calls and tell the company that they are not to call again, they must honour your request.

    And it goes without saying that any company calling claiming you have won something or asking for credit card information for charitable donations are to be treated extremely sceptically. A general rule of thumb is to ask for their contact information and call them back if you think they are legitimate and you are interested in doing business. If they are unwilling to cooperate then you should run for the hills.

    In the meantime, you can contact the Better Business Bureau's Wise Giving Alliance to see if companies claiming to be national charities are scams. For local organizations, contact your state consumer protection office and ask if the charity is registered.

    Scam charities can be reported to the Federal Trade Commission's Consumer Response Center, with complaint forms available here.

    Let peaceful quiet dinnertimes all over the world be reinstated and celebrated! Stop the marketers in their tracks! We live in a world where we are being constantly bombarded with sales pitches - on television, radio, movies, newspapers, billboards, heck - even public washroom stall doors…let's keep the home a sacred haven from such invasions.

    About Nora Dunn

    Nora Dunn's picture

    As a Professional Hobo and Writer, with a background as a former Certified Financial Planner and Entrepreneur, I've got lots of bases covered - not the least of which are practical money matters.

    "

    Went the cell phone route but still get calls - on the do not call list with the cell phone - have reported some companies and the ftc did nothing. There's also a law in there that says that even if you did business with a company (or filled out a form or had your phone number snagged from the internet) you can tell them to stop and if they continue to call you can report them and have them fined ... but again the ftc doesn't seem to care about that either.

    I just don't answer my phone unless I recognize the number (and even then sometimes I don't answer if I'm busy.)

    "

    "

    Just registered my landline with the do not call list. That was pretty easy. Thanks for the link, Nora!

    If I do get a call from a telemarketer, I just hang up on them. Not a word wasted. As soon as I hear the computer voice or the monotone of a bored live person....

    Click. Buh-bye.

    "

    I registered my number with the Do Not Call list the day it was announced, and the number of telemarketing calls I receive has steadily increased over the past number of years. My suspicion is that the list is simply used as another call list.

    There are too many exceptions in the law. In particular, the allowance for companies with which you have recently done business really does defeat the entire spirit of the law. For example, if you have a credit card through a large bank, any of its subsidiaries and business partners can call you with "special offers". Most of my calls are generated through this chain of bank partners.

    "

    I like to put them on hold just to see how long they stay there. It wastes their time so they make less contacts and less money. It also wastes their time so someone else isn't bothered. Of course if you're on a cell minute-plan, this strategy isn't recommended :)

        

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