Investing

banks, funds, stocks, terminology

Life & Career

career, work, food, life, pets

Money

debt, credit, budgets, home, auto

Protect

insurance, emergency, identity

Retire

401K, IRA’s, retirement planning

Home » Budgeting

Comcast’s Kryptonite Discovered

Submitted by G.E. Miller on Tuesday, 12 May 200915 Comments

How to Cut your Comcast Bill

I was 0-for-2 in previous attempts with Comcast to get a break on my cable bill. I had no leverage. Comcast knows that they’re the only cable provider game in town, which doesn’t give you much in the way of price negotiation power. Well, it some locales, that’s not true anymore.

Recently, AT&T has rolled out their U-Verse cable service in my area. I decided to do some price comparisons. I found out that I could get an equivalent plan through U-Verse for about $20 cheaper than what I was paying with Comcast. A very similar service at a cheaper price – that’s Comcast kryptonite! Here’s how I got my cable bill lowered and how you can too.

save-comcast1. Research Comcast & Competitor Deals

You want to know exactly how much your current plan would cost with other providers. This is your leverage. You can try the nice and charming route or raise your hands and scream and shout, but if you don’t have pricing leverage, you won’t get anywhere.

2. Ask for a Comcast ‘Retention Specialist’

These are the guys/gals who have the power to cut you a deal. A regular customer service rep. won’t do anything for you. This is the problem that I ran into before.

3. Tell Comcast that you want to Cancel

Be resolute. You’re not ‘considering canceling’. You are switching to their competitor because they have lower prices.

4. Get Ready for the Negotiations

Since, I was already half way out the door, I was offered a $15/mo. discount immediately, the next highest tier of service, and Showtime. Not bad for starters.

5. Watch out for Comcat Add-Ons

You will probably get offered something you don’t want (i.e. Showtime). Realize that this is just an add on masquerading as part of a package deal. It’s not. If you don’t want an add-on, be adamate about it. I was given another $5 off. I didn’t fight the higher tier because there were a few channels I wanted.

6. The End Result: I Save Money on Comcast!

The end result was $20 off and more service. I was happy with that.

7. If at First you don’t Succeed, Try Again

This was my third attempt before success. The good news if you don’t succeed is that you can always try back again later, with more experience and knowledge about the objections you will get. A little competition in the marketplace is always a good thing.

Comcast Bill Discussion:

  • Have you had success in negotiating with Comcast or a similar cable provider?
  • Have you given up cable completely due to their rigid price structure?
  • Have you switched to U-Verse, or will you at first opportunity?

If you found this article helpful, you can subscribe to the 20somethingfinance RSS feed, or sign up for free email updates. You may also find the following articles of interest:

My Review of the Budget Slimming Ooma VOIP System

How to Use Ooma and Net10 to Cut your Phone Bills in Half

Share and Enjoy (and comment below):
  • email
  • Print
  • PDF
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Tipd
  • Digg
  • RSS
  • StumbleUpon
  • del.icio.us
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Technorati

15 Comments »

  • Philip said:

    I switched to U-Verse over a year ago, as my monthly bill including cable and Internet was more than $30 less than with Comcast. Not only that, but the included DVR is great, the service includes 3 receivers, whole home DVR (watch recorded programs from any receiver), tons of HD channels, 4 recordings at once (including 2 HD), and I could go on. Competition is a great thing!

  • Do You Dave Ramsey? said:

    This techique works…. I’ve tried it with DirecTV with similar results… lower rates for a period of time, increased programming, free DVR reciever. You just have to be willing to walk.

    Also, trying more than one rep and getting to the retention specialist is key. I’ve often found when dealing with a customer service rep that it’s easier to end the call and try again than to argue with a rep. I’ve ended a call as soon as the rep says hello because I can sense an attitude in their voice.

    Treating it like a game is the only way to win.

  • G.E. Miller (author) said:

    @ Philip – let’s hope they just aren’t ‘introductory’ rates used to steal Comcast subscribers.

    @ Do you – I think it’s kind of fun, actually. Most people hate any sort of negotiation though.

  • Phinance said:

    I just tried to get out of a contract with DirecTV. I called and canceled my service of $75/mo. They called back and said they’d give me free movie channels for 6 months at a price of $45/mo. I was happy, but when the bill arrived yesterday it was still at $75 a month. Needless to say I’m furious.

  • RD @ emoneylog said:

    I had a similar experience while negotiating with Comcast but the difference was they are still the only provider in my area.

    http://www.emoneylog.com/negotiation/my-comcast-negotiating-experience/

  • Another Philip said:

    I am stuck with no cable option outside comcast (satellite is available but I don’t like satellite). I have gotten some introductory offers a couple times. I am sure it is coming up time that it will end again. Things is I am willing to cut off all television down to super basic 10 channels, but I must have my internet. They are ridiculous for just internet service alone!

  • Xander said:

    AWESOME. I called to change from Comcast internet yesterday ($40/month? I think not) but had to hang up before I was done. Glad I stumbled across this today. They shall feel my wrath.

  • Xander said:

    Success. I got another 6 months on my promotional rate and gave the “Retention Specialist” a commission in the process. A good day was had by all.

  • Lyndell said:

    I’ll just flat out cancel Comcast, becoming an internet HoBo. If I really need TV, broadcast has gone digital.

  • Lori said:

    I’ve tried twice in the past few months to negotiate my Comcast bill. I have the Triple Play package which runs me $150/month. Today, just randomly, I decided I was wasting money with my home phone (I only get wrong numbers and everyone calls my cell anyway) so I called up Comcast to drop that service. Didn’t expect any big changes but the rep was EXTREMELY helpful and looked up different pricing options for me and offered me $97/month for cable and internet (I still get all my channels and HBO) and am locked in for 2 years. I’m so psyched I’m saving around $50/month! I didn’t even plan on trying to negotiate my bill again but it just worked out in my favor this time!

  • Johnny Sorehand said:

    Nice, useful site. Thanks. Several years ago when I switched from Comcast to Dish to save $$, I called Comcast to cancel and they switched me to what I later learned was a “retention specialist.” She offered me deal slightly better than what I’d just negotiated with Dish. But deal was done, so I stayed with Dish for a year, then switched back to Comcast. After the first year of promotional rate on cable with all the goodies at $47, I had to do it again, but got a retention specialist in a good mood (or with a retention quota) who upped the price to $53 but added more movies and a critical sports channel. Now I’m about to go into the trenches again. Wish me luck.

  • freeannualcreditreport said:

    Cancellation is the best way to do. I use it once and it very work.
    You should try on.

  • Hoa Binh said:

    Just kidding with “Since, I was already half way out the door, I was offered a $15/mo. discount immediately, the next highest tier of service, and Showtime. Not bad for starters.”

    Bui Thi Xuan, Marie Curie, Nghe Nhin, Article Directory,

  • Pete Loans said:

    Yeah, @number 7, try again! Success doesn’t happen overnight! lol

  • Chad said:

    I called Cox Cable a long time ago cause I was paying $130 a month. Complained and even had the service cancelled! But they called me back the next day and offered me the same thing for $75 a month (cable service AND internet).

Leave a comment!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam.

You can use these tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

This is a Gravatar-enabled weblog. To get your own globally-recognized-avatar, please register at Gravatar.