📨 Have you signed up to the Forum's new Email Digest yet? Get a selection of trending threads sent straight to your inbox daily, weekly or monthly!

Pc Callout Ltd ???

2456714

Comments

  • Conor_3
    Conor_3 Posts: 6,944 Forumite
    Might have a punt at it. Can run it alongside the agency work I'm doing. Been S/E until recently anyway so it's no big deal for me.
  • I've worked for these guys weeks and am yet to see a penny from them. Since I raised issues regarding where my payment is, all emails from them have now just stopped. I will be speaking directly with the job centre regarding advertising this outfit. I firmly believe they are a scam company operating out of Spain with a post box in London.

    Beware folks, the company patter is very believable.
  • Conor_3
    Conor_3 Posts: 6,944 Forumite
    Thx for the heads up. I've been looking into the viability of opening a shop instead.
  • I stopped "working" for this company six months ago. I say working, but I actually mean contracting as you're working on a strictly self employed basis.
    £15 an hour sounds quite good when you first hear it, but you will quickly see that the majority of bookings passed on to you by PC Call Out are easily completed in under an hour (removing spyware and other easy tasks). Their hourly charge was a ridiculous £58, which I found difficult to justify considering the nature of the jobs.

    The company must be recruiting engineers on a continous basis, so much so that I was emailed the "Payment Procedures" and "Information for new engineers" almost weekly. PC Call Out also encouraged dragging out bookings as long as possible, encouring "engineers" (as they like to call us) to install trial versions of software in order to achieve this. The usual customers seemed to be elderly and with little or no experience of computers.
    Easy money you might think, but I quickly found that it was difficult to justify doing it - I was an evening engineer and despite telling them early on that I would only be prepared to do jobs in my local town (afterall, that's where the job was advertised on the JCP website) I was routinely allocated jobs 30-40 miles away, which I would then have to waste an evening (1 hours driving there, 1 hour at the booking, 1 hour driving back) all for the sake of earning £15 (which I would then have to pay tax on) plus a pitiful 15p per mile (barely covering fuel costs).
    Although I eventually (3 weeks in) recieved payment, I found the whole thing to be quite dodgy. As the guy above says, the company is not even in the UK, and there reputable sounding Regent Street address is nothing more than a dodgy PO Box. (search for the address on google if you don't believe me). If you ever need to contact someone, you are given a voicemail number only and someone calls you back - It's not possible to ring them direct.
    All in all it seems like quite a lucrative business for them - They probably don't have any overheads (office space, etc) and are raking in 40 pound an hour just for taking a phone call from a customer and allocating the job to an "engineer", who does the ringing, travelling, and work for the princely sum of £15 an hour. Easy money for them indeed.
    One thing, they were always banging on about "dishonest" engineers and I can see why. It would have been easy to obtain a booking from PC Call Out, then ring them and tell them the customer had decided to cancel their booking. I knew of an engineer who's only reason for working for them was because of this - He'd get the customer's details, contact them direct, get them to cancel the booking, then go and visit them privately. Customers would usually agree to this as they would be charged a lot less, and the engineer in question could charge say £30, in which case they'd both come out better off.

    PC Call Out however wised up to this and tried to ban the contacting of customers. This proved quite ridiculous, as you'd often end up arriving at the booking with no prior knowledge of what the problem was
  • ^ Giz-a-job....I c'n dae tha' job!

    (probably lost on anyone who doesn't know who Yosser Hughes(?) was)
    Utinam logica falsa tuam philosophiam totam suffodiant.
  • DCFC79
    DCFC79 Posts: 40,641 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper
    Conor wrote: »
    Thx for the heads up. I've been looking into the viability of opening a shop instead.

    Is that a computer shop
  • ^ I thought he meant a sandwich shop!?
    Utinam logica falsa tuam philosophiam totam suffodiant.
  • chunter
    chunter Posts: 2,020 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Combo Breaker
    £21.50 for someone to turn up at the door and say "sorry can't fix that" !!
    no fix, no fee ??
  • DCFC79
    DCFC79 Posts: 40,641 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper
    ^ I thought he meant a sandwich shop!?

    maybe it is, i took a guess it was a computer shop
  • DCFC79
    DCFC79 Posts: 40,641 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper
    Ive googled the address and this is the second of the google search result, and this is a result from who.is
This discussion has been closed.
Meet your Ambassadors

🚀 Getting Started

Hi new member!

Our Getting Started Guide will help you get the most out of the Forum

Categories

  • All Categories
  • 351.3K Banking & Borrowing
  • 253.2K Reduce Debt & Boost Income
  • 453.7K Spending & Discounts
  • 244.3K Work, Benefits & Business
  • 599.5K Mortgages, Homes & Bills
  • 177.1K Life & Family
  • 257.8K Travel & Transport
  • 1.5M Hobbies & Leisure
  • 16.2K Discuss & Feedback
  • 37.6K Read-Only Boards

Is this how you want to be seen?

We see you are using a default avatar. It takes only a few seconds to pick a picture.