TelOne Managing Director – We Are Owed ZW$500m By Telephone Bill Defaulters

TelOne’s Managing Director recently revealed in an interview that they are owed ZW500 million by consumers yet to pay their telephone bills and this is having an adverse impact on service delivery.

We are currently owed just over ZW$500 million from outstanding telephone bills by our clients, mostly government, parastatals, corporates and individuals.

Chipo Mtasa TelOne Managing Director

Mtasa also disclosed that they had intensified efforts to collect the money and so far had managed to get a ZW$30m payment plan from the government. A year ago, TelOne disclosed that the government owed them $93 million – it’s not clear if this figure will be adjusted for inflation going forward because $93 million in July 2019, and $93 million in 2020 are vastly different sums.

Whether or not this will materialise in something tangible for the telecoms company is yet to be seen. I say this because last year when TelOne disclosed how much the government owed them, it was because the debts were affecting service just like they are still doing today.

Outside of the government’s payment plan, TelOne is said to be engaging other methods as well i.e blacklisting bad debtors and litigation.

For a while now locals have complained about the service delivery from internet service providers and it would be fair to argue that without settlement of bills it would be unrealistic to expect world class service delivery.

I think TelOne could also do better by disclosing who actually owes them what just for it to be clearer whether its corporate, government or just the public who owe the most. It probably wouldn’t make much of a difference for them but a cool thing for the public to note.

Chipo Mtasa also disclosed that the motivation for moving to a prepaid billing system was so the company could protect itself and 90% of the residential consumers have been moved to prepaid billing for TelOne’s telephony:

Furthermore, we have also been migrating defaulting clients, mostly residential and small and medium enterprises to pre-paid in order to limit the company’s exposure to credit risk and the resultant adverse impact on cashflows.

To date, 90% of the total residential market has been migrated to pre-paid.

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One response

  1. Anonymous

    You need to name them. I can just imagine who they are! Just like the amounts owed to Zesa.

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