Save Money on Term agreements

Term agreements
Carriers normally offer 12-, 24-, and 36-month term agreements. The longer a customer will commit to a carrier, the greater discount the carrier will offer. The combination of the term agreement and volume commitment establish the discount amount.

On national accounts, carriers will normally push for an even longer term agreement, such as 48or 60-month agreements. Ironically, the longer your term agreement, the less attention you get from your carrier. The carrier knows that they have no risk of losing your business in the short term, so they focus their attention on their more volatile customers.

Save money with term agreements
Increasing your term commitment increases your discount amount. Carriers push the 36-month term agreement because they want to count on the customer’s revenue for as long a period as possible. The pricing difference between 24and 36-month agreements is often negligible, so the customer should choose the shorter-term commitment.

Many account executives offer a new 36-month term agreement as their standard offer. If the customer is a savvy negotiator, he can often secure the same pricing on a 12-month agreement. A rule that guides many consultants is to simply reject the long-distance carrier’s first proposal. Consultants know from experience that account executives rarely offer the best pricing with their first proposal. In this way, long-distance contract negotiation differs little from the negotiation done while buying a car.

In some cases, a customer’s current long-distance contract may be amended to increase the term. In other words, another year can be added to the agreement without requiring a new contract. In most cases, however, increasing the term agreement to secure lower discounts is normally done during the initial contract negotiation.

Some small areas of the country are not yet “equal access.” That means that customers in those areas can only choose AT&T as their long-distance carrier. For example, a Midwest aluminum siding company is located in a rural area surrounded by farm fields. Its facility uses more than $5,000 per month in long distance, but the company can only use AT&T. None of the other carriers have built a network out to this remote area. This business might as well sign the maximum term agreement available because it has no other choice of carrier. At least with a long-term agreement, it can secure the lowest rates available through AT&T.

A business that receives specialized services from one carrier that cannot be duplicated by another carrier should also sign a long-term agreement with its carrier. An oil prospecting business located in Texas spends more than $10,000 per month in long distance. Most of the billing is from calls made by field representatives who are in remote areas of the Middle East. The field representatives use calling cards for their calls. The telecommunications infrastructure is underdeveloped in the oilfields of the Middle East, and only AT&T can satisfactorily provide this service.

Other carriers would like to earn the company’s business, but the company cannot afford the risks associated with trying a new carrier. This business has no reason to not sign a long-term agreement with its current carrier.

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