PTCL offers free connections under ‘Bilkul Muft scheme’

PTCL’s ‘Bilkul Muft scheme’:

Under this scheme people would get new telephone connection by making a call at PTCL UAN number 111900900 if technically feasible the PTCL representative will visit the subscribers’ residence and after filing of new telephone connection form, the connection would be provided at subscriber’s residence.

Anyone called that number?

Additionally, they have also reduced the phone tariffs to Rs 3.50 per minute between any two cities in Pakistan. Last month they posted a profits of RS 21 billion. In parallel, PTCL plans to privatize 26% of their operations and is one of the heavy-weight tickers keeping the market bullish. Quite agressive.

Is the PTCL copper-wire infrastucture running through the city really worth that much? Maybe it’s the backbone that holds all this promise or maybe they are simply trying to set themselves up for high bids from foreign investors.

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5 Responses to “PTCL offers free connections under ‘Bilkul Muft scheme’”

  1. Teeth Maestro says:

    Free !!! Free !!!In Pakistan things are ‘rarely’ free and soemthing free from PTCL is unthinkable, whatever the game plan I suspect that this 111-900-900 call would be the some whopping charged phonecall that lands you a bill for call to some center in Cayman Islands.

    Whats the offical cost for a new connection BTW (ofcourse with the bribing and chai-pani)

  2. Anonymous says:

    You are underestimatingMost businesses (cellphone carriers and cable providors especially) offer a free service and lock the consumer in. Once your telephone number is out there you wouldn’t want to lose it and will pay atleast the monthly subscription charge which to them is better than no monthly charge at all. The business plan is very good, however, the problem I suspect might be with its execution.

    Not sure how much a regular phoneline costs but if you want it done within a month or so you’ll need to tip the lineman.

  3. Anonymous says:

    Thats a new onewhats the catch

  4. Anonymous says:

    YUPi agree totally free? nbody here knows the meaning of that word

  5. Zunaira says:

    In the news…today, apparently a number of subscribers who signed up when the same scheme was last introduced are still waiting for the free phone to show up–or a PTCL lineman who can update them on its status. PTCL is getting so predictably unreliable, it should coin a slogan around it.

    I signed up for a regular phone line 3 months ago. So there is no rocket science to it. Fill out a form, attach a lease agreement, ID card and two references…done! In four days I reappeared, picked my demand draft and paid up close to Rs.900 for a new phone.

    So how can this possibly go wrong? The phone exchange instead of issuing a new phone number to me, alloted one that was ‘no longer in use’ [previously issued to some one else] running thousands of rupees in excess billing. And so it started, a 2-month saga of running around PTCL, exchange, HQ, phone disconnections, incorrect billing, and finally, a danda from the top fixing things for me.

    You think these guys can sell free phones??