Tags for Forum Posts: scam
Unsolicited communications (phone/doorstep) from strangers normally share one thing in common: effrontery. They often start off with a question, without introducing themselves. The safest thing is to ignore whatever they say, especially if its a question, and before anything else, establish exactly who they are and who they represent.
Utilities salesmen and women are proably the worst offenders (e.g. "I'm from the phone/electricity company" – they often try to imply or suggest they represent the company with which you already have a billing relationship)
I relish giving bollockings to such types. I informed one such salesman that he had been misleading (about who he represented and what he was doing). He countered by saying it wasn't misleading. I bellowed at him, "If I say its misleading, it is misleading!". He got the idea that a sale was unlikely and he withdrew ...
Hi Josephine, thanks for letting us know. Isn't it better to quickly answer the door anyway, though - we also hear a lot about burglars checking if we are in or not.....
I've had a number of weird people come around recently too including someone who claimed to be a builder and wanted to repair some broken tiles in my front garden immediately for "only" £25. Or maybe he was just an unemployed person desperate for work, I don't know. I told him to give me his business card as I didn't have £25 on me anyway and needed to discuss with my husband - he said he had no cards with him and appeared to lose interest immediately...
We had the telephone bloke the other night, very well dressed bloke. Asked me about my talk talk line, I said we have Virgin and that was it, he left?
Also a lady on Thursday night pleading with me that she needed to get back to Colchester and needed some.....SLAM....the door went.
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