On Sat, 16 May 2009 07:04:34 Chris Hope wrote:

> or could indicate
>
> 3. They don't work from their own office and always work on-site at
> their customer's offices where they may or may not have a phone. I did
> this for a period of several months and if you'd rung my land line you
> wouldn't have ever got hold of me.

What I do is divert my calls from my landline to my mobile. Cost a flatrate 
$10 per month with Vodafone.

> or a number of other things people have suggested here.
>
> > Matias Gertel to nzphpug
> > Strangely enough, if I give someone (business related) both my mobile
> > and my landline, they will always call my mobile.
>
> Same here.

This can often happen in a snapshot in time in any given company. There was a 
time too when I would readily ring a mobile phone. However consistently 
receiving phone bills for several hundred dollars gave me reason to rethink 
the matter. My late Father, who was the most financially conservative person 
I know, was in business for over 30 years prior to his forced retirement for 
health reasons. My general observation is that businesses that last a 
challenging economic time or two generally are quite expense adverse.

Various experiences have caused me to conclude that I prefer clients who 
aren't financially wasteful and often the ones that readily call me on my 
mobile are.

Michael

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