Firms fret as
Phone numbers are seen on taxis on a street in
Vietnam is ringing in changes next month to make way for a
standardized phone numbering plan, but is struggling to get through to
businesses hung up on how much it will cost them.
The
government abruptly announced changes to millions of phone numbers from March
1, keeping its business community on edge about forking out money to replace
everything from shop front signage, banners on trucks and buses, and neon-lit
taxi signs to business cards, letterheads, invoices and brochures.
"The
cost for fixing the phone numbers is terribly high, but the invisible costs
could be higher," said Nguyen Kim Khanh, an executive of Taxi Group,
Taxi
Group will need new signs and stickers on all 2,000 cabs in its fleet, but
Khanh's worst fear is that regular clients may forget to update their
cellphone address books.
"We're
worried about customers who may switch to other cabs if their first call to
us cannot connect," she said.
Cellphone
usage is rising fast among
In a
country with five mobile phone operators, the change in phone numbers is part
of a complex market restructuring process. Authorities say this will
standardize existing numbers to make room for future growth, and they have no
choice but to act now.
"Over
these 50 years, the environment of telecoms business and telecoms technology
has changed swiftly," Le Nam Thang, Deputy Minister of Information and
Communications, said in a January directive announcing the changes.
All
11-digit mobile numbers are be shortened to 10 digits, with new area codes
assigned to 59 of
"It's
very much troublesome," said Pham Hai Yen, head of
A
separate government project to give each citizen a new identification number
by 2020 is already causing bureaucratic headaches. Bank customers complain
they're turned away by confused clerks or made to undergo verification
procedures because their new ID numbers don't match records.
But the
phone number changes are a godsend for Truong Tuan Nghia, whose printing firm
is bracing for a deluge of orders.
"This
is a huge opportunity for the printing industry," he said.
Reuters/Thanh Nien News
|
Thứ Hai, 2 tháng 2, 2015
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