Telecom has put its email service provider Yahoo! on notice after what one executive says is a service that has left Telecom running no more than “a very expensive customer complaints service.”
New Zealand’s largest telecommunications retailer says a “series of issues” over the past year, including this week’s highly disruptive attack by hackers, had “impacted negatively” on the Yahoo! service.
BusinessDesk understands the two-month review could see Telecom cease to offer email addresses as part of its broadband packages. The company had already been considering whether what had once been a core part of its retail offering was now outmoded.
Yahoo!’s New Zealand portal is one of the underdog global internet player’s more successful sites, generating substantial traffic and consequent revenue because so many of the 450,000 registered Xtra email users have Yahoo! set as their home page.
After this week’s hacker problems, Telecom’s retail chief executive Chris Quin said “repeatedly saying ‘sorry’ doesn’t cut it anymore.”
While Yahoo! was the right provider when Telecom contracted out its email service, Xtra, in 2007, “the global email environment has changed markedly since then.”
“We believe the time is right for a comprehensive review of our approach in this area,” he said.
Telecom initially blamed this week’s hacker invasion of Xtra customers’ databases on customer error, before “double-checking” with Yahoo! to be told there had been “two separate but potentially related malicious attacks” in recent days.
The Yahoo! service also failed customers last year when a break in the trans-Pacific fibre-optic cable saw a backlog of emails take days to clear once the cable was repaired.
While Google’s Gmail service and MSN’s Hotmail are potential replacements, along with other cloud-based solutions, indications are that Telecom does not want to leave its customers’ experience in another provider’s hands.
“We’ve been asking ourselves what we’re running, and basically at the moment we’re running a very expensive customer complaints service,” a senior Telecom executive said.
The review also comes at a time when Yahoo! globally is seeking to build a more successful business using under-developed strengths in curated content and search capability.
Quin said Yahoo! would be consulted in the review.
(BusinessDesk)