*This post also appears on blogwatch.tv
I am basically a nobody. I am just a relatively newly-hired call
center agent with enough salary to keep me going. All I wanted– although
I knew it is a luxury to have such– is to have a fancy phone as a pat
on my back after working so hard every night, staying over the phone and
listening to at least 2 Westerners curse at me. The previous sentences
are out of the question but then again, I can’t help but feel
disappointed when I started to apply for a postpaid plan. I felt
disappointed that I can’t get myself into Globe Telecom’s policies.
Actually, not only am I disappointed. I felt discriminated and insulted.
As a Globe Telecom Prepaid user for years, I have been so satisfied
with the services they offer. Even though I was with Sun Cellular for a
brief period, I still went back with Globe because for me, nothing beats
it. So when I set my goal to have myself enrolled in plan for a
smartphone, I chose Globe already without any apprehension.
So there I was few hours ago: It was payday and I have the money for
the deposit they required. I spent the past two months earning my keep
just to have the money for deposit. Also, I already have all the
requirements set up. I went to the store and presented all the documents
they needed and lo and behold, I was asked if I have a credit card with
me. I asked why and double checked the list of requirements they gave
me. Credit card was never a requirement according to that list but when I
asked, they said that for BPO employees applying for a postpaid
account, a credit card IS a requirement. When I asked why this
requirement apply specifically to BPO employees, they are so quick to
reply to say it is the company’s policy.
I felt that I was discriminated and being looked down upon right then
and there. Why isolate BPO employees? Why is the credit card
requirement for BPO not listed on the requirement list? The only reason I
can think of behind this policy is that they profiled BPO employees as
“bad-payers” and by requiring us with a credit card would mean assurance
that they will get paid. Obviously, such equivocation is a quick
generalization and a head-to-toe insult to the whole BPO industry.
It was unfortunate that a telecom company who advertises it self with
the slogan “Abot mo” (Within your reach) seem to have itself difficult
“to be reached” for call center agents. I know they are up for business
and want to secure their revenues, but having a special-case system
with BPO employees is way out of line. Are they trying to impute that
the BPO industry is so volatile that its workers can’t pay their monthly
dues? Are they insinuating that call center agents are irresponsible
when it comes to paying bills? Worse comes to worst, do they think that
BPO call center agents are too poor to afford their plan? I would
understand it better if they do this with all of their applicant, but
no, call center agents are singled-out of the group. Had they backed
this out with a plausible explanation, it would be more understandable
but no, we can only hear them saying, “It’s company’s policy. The End.
Goodbye”
Yes, the “protecting the business” part is quite understandable, but
putting down a discriminating policy is what irks me the most. It is sad
that even though one has already complied with the necessary documents,
the application is being denied just because he is working in a very
volatile industry. They may argue that call center agents may have their
jobs
unstable because they keep on shopping from one company to the other
and not staying in one company for quite some time, but that is out of
the question. They may also argue that US is passing anti-outsourcing
law and endangers the entire industry as a whole, but that also is out
of the question. One thing is obvious though, they don’t want– or at
least it seems to be– call center agents as their customer mainly
because they are JUST call center agents. Adding “uneducated” and
“inexperienced” may be too harsh and exaggerating but that is how their
message came to me.
If I were to give them the benefit of the doubt, the only question in my mind is so simple: Why this policy?
Updated 8:00 PM
Attached is page 1 of 4 of the Globe Price Bulletin as of January
20, 2012. As you may notice, credit card is given only as an option but
not as a requirement. Also, there is no special note there saying that
BPO companies should have a credit card and enroll in an auto-debit
system.
Saturday, February 11, 2012
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Delving into the Specifics of Globe’s Anti-BPO Policy
*This post also appears in blogwatch.tv
Last Friday, I wrote about the apparent discriminatory policy of Globe telecom against call center agents and since then, I received messages from people I didn’t expect to contact me. After posting last week’s article, Globe Telecom denied that they have an anti-BPO employee policy and they don’t require for credit card for such applications. Globe Telecom, through its representative, also contacted me and the representative said that he will get back to me the soonest he hears from their internal team.
Five days and a thousand hits later, I still have yet to hear from them and I am totally confused because the representative and the Globe stores tell contradictory statements. So, I did some clarifications by calling their postpaid hotline and tried to inquire about the requirements.
This time, the Sales Specialist I talked with was very specific with the requirements. For BPO applicants, aside from the 3 major requirements, a credit card will be required for BPO employees working less than 2 years in the current BPO company. Also, the credit card requirement is not mandatory for BPO employees with managerial positions. I was also told that the minimum gross monthly income required to apply for a postpaid line is Php 10,000 (No problem with that as BPO employees, generally, earn more than that). Again, I also asked for explanation about this “mandatory policy” but I was denied of hearing one.
These specifics now raise few questions and let me enumerate them. (For simplicity’s sake, let’s assume we have Employee A who has worked for BPO Company X for more than 2 years and Employee B who has worked for the same company for less than 2 years). Why is Employee A not required to present a credit card? Apart from the duration of tenure, what is the difference between Employee A and Employee B and how can Globe Telecom arrive at the conclusion that the former will pay more faithfully than the latter? Also, how can Globe Telecom know that Employee C- let’s assume this employee has a managerial position- can pay more faithfully than Employee A? With all of these, it is getting more apparent to me that there is a deliberate intention to make the application more difficult for BPO agents. Furthermore, what is more apparent- and this is my paranoid mind talking- is the assumption that call center agents can not and would not pay for their bills should their application be accepted.
A reply from Twitter said that Globe Telecom has the right to choose which person they will enter a contract with. I totally understand such but then again, they could have phrased this policy in a non-discriminatory manner. Whether the reason behind this policy is the high attrition rate or the relatively volatile nature of the industry, the sad thing is that they could get away with their discriminatory remarks. Such generalization hurts me because no proper disclosure was made and this policy remains to be told orally and not in writing. It appears that they have the intention to lure BPO agents into applying then drop their discriminatory policy right into our face.
I know that such policy may not be illegal and Globe Telecom has no legal liability in this particular case but they should be more sensitive enough to their consumer’s feelings. Yes, business is business and safeguarding revenue is their primary goal but that doesn’t excuse them to look down upon BPO agents who apparently are working as hard as the rest of the work force. With the BPO Industry’s relatively significant contribution to our economy, Globe Telecom should really study this specific policy. Better yet, they should refrain from making discriminatory and insulting policies at all times.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
To UST: Online Media is the Future
**The following article also appears in blogwatch.tv
For me, the most important thing the internet gave us is voice, thus, allowing ordinary citizens to express their views and opinions in blogs and in social networking sites. The internet has evolved from a mere connecting tool to a platform of exchange of ideas and opinions. With the wide array of information fleeting from user to user, netizens have also evolved from merely chatmates to a new breed of responsible citizens collecting together of what was known today as new media.
I do not consider myself as a journalist simply because I have no degree in journalism nor have I enrolled myself in such courses. The only journalism background I had was during high school when I Used to write and compete for our school newspaper but then again that is completely amateur. I am a blogger and I am confident and proud to say that I use the internet in order to engage with other users and opine on several relevant issues. Maybe I am underqualified but nonetheless, my voice being heard satisfies myself beyond what I expect. Writing my blog and for Blog Watch, however, I admit that in effect, I might be an online journalist no matter how much I don’t want to label myself as such.
For me, the most important thing the internet gave us is voice, thus, allowing ordinary citizens to express their views and opinions in blogs and in social networking sites. The internet has evolved from a mere connecting tool to a platform of exchange of ideas and opinions. With the wide array of information fleeting from user to user, netizens have also evolved from merely chatmates to a new breed of responsible citizens collecting together of what was known today as new media.
I do not consider myself as a journalist simply because I have no degree in journalism nor have I enrolled myself in such courses. The only journalism background I had was during high school when I Used to write and compete for our school newspaper but then again that is completely amateur. I am a blogger and I am confident and proud to say that I use the internet in order to engage with other users and opine on several relevant issues. Maybe I am underqualified but nonetheless, my voice being heard satisfies myself beyond what I expect. Writing my blog and for Blog Watch, however, I admit that in effect, I might be an online journalist no matter how much I don’t want to label myself as such.
As a “de facto online journalist”, therefore, you cannot blame me
if I took offense from the arrogance the University of Santo Tomas
displayed in itsstatement defending
Chief Justice Renato Corona’s doctorate degree. I take offense simply
because the statement itself is bullying and I refused to be bullied.
Though the attack may not be personally directed to me, UST
ridiculed online journalism and its potential in developing the current
state of Filipino journalism. Questioning the credibility of online journalists
is out of the original argument in the first place but they continue by
asserting that they are at a loss in considering online journalism
having the same weight as mainstream ones. UST tries to act as an
authority in journalism and starts to lambast online written
commentaries yet forgets to check the quality of their journalism as
reflected by their official publication. What is the credibility of an
institution that allows its publication to resort to name-calling rather than arguing by pure logic? What is the credibility of an institution wherein faculty members writing for dailies try to impute malice in a supposedly straight-forward news article? This power-tripping definitely tries to discredit and bullies netizens rather than addressing the topic in question.
Online netizens may not be as qualified as the tenured UST
faculties but they can provide raw, unbiased facts far from commercially
spun ones they present in the mainstream media. Between the mainstream
and online journalism, the latter provides a more precise reflection of
public opinion. Between the two, the latter moves relatively
frictionless and therefore can be easily disseminated. Credibility is
not imputed by any authority; it is the reader’s judgment call as
how Ms. Noemi Dado see it. Acclaimed Filipino journalist Maria Ressa
recognizes the new media’s potential and asserts that both medium can go
hand-in-hand in improving the current trends in news reporting and
commentary making. What UST did is that they tried to create a rift
between the two . As a netizen, I refuse to accept that. If they want to
continue their shallow power-tripping, they may want to realize that
right now, internet is the trend and continues to expand exponentially.
Online media is the future— and UST should learn how to deal with it.
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