Just tell them that they are interrupting you while you are stroking your cock. Even better, tell them to talk dirty until your happy ending and you might consider purchasing from them. Works well for both male and female solicitors.
Thanks t8rs. I checked the link. It looks like the government has passed legislation for the list, but it is not operational yet. Soon, I hope.t8rs said:
Related thead:Hard Idle said:Another good option is to tell them they`ve called a business line. Simply say something like "I`m sorry you must have the wrong number. This is Scotia Bank merchant services".
Calling ineligible numbers lowers their productivity so they`d be more dilligent in filtering you from their database. However, if a company uses multiple vendors to pitch their products, they just recycle the original calling list, so you`ll need to be coded as a "business" by each of them individually before you stop getting calls. .
Or in other words rip off the person who comes to the door.Hard Idle said:Not all calls are from big corporations who buy lists from major sources or deal with the CMA / CDMA. Stopping the calls from small local business like window companies, roofers, landscapers and upholstery cleaners is a totally different approach.
Here is a good How-To from a forum called 800notes.com which I found completely by accident while Googling a phone number.
It took a few days to get over the jealousy from not thinking of this obvious tactic myself (since I consider myself an artist in lesson-teaching and vendeta escalations) but it would be worng not to share it with others.
After many ignored requests for a Window company to stop calling, this guy recomends that you play along and book an in-home appointment.
You make it a weekday between 6PM and 7PM to ensure the rep battles the worst of rush hour traffic. The rep migh even call you before the appointment form his/her cell phone - that's how you get their number.
When they arrive, you hijack the meeting by giving them copies of your "don't call" request letters (faxes/e-mails..) along with a new letter, and the copies sent to CRTC, BBB and their phone provider.
(if you get reps cell phone, you can also imply you will blog that number for other angry households to call at all hours ...)
This will be a very frustrating experience for the field rep (usually a comissioned contractor) who will have spent time preparing a presentation not to mention travel time and gasoline on a wasted trip - and he/she will give the aggravation back to the owners.
If reps keep getting bad appointments, you can bet the owners will feel the pressure to improve their list clean-up rather than risk losing a good salses agents.
Would not recommend this to people who are not as strong willed as you. I had an older family member who is somewhat ill, accept an in-home appointment with people like this for vacuum sales. Their behaviour was appalling, to the point of her having to call the police to get them out of the house (they didn't come, as they left when she got on the phone with the 911 operator). They were calling her names, being verbally abusive towards her and she felt threatened in her own home. Sometimes the guys that get sent on these calls aren't your regular nicey-nicey, mousey, hard-wroking, door-to-door, I'm-putting-myself-through-med-school types. They have attitudes and are trained in nasty sales tactics such that they may take it out on you before they take it out on their owners. Their personalities may even be prone to anti-social behaviour.Hard Idle said:Not all calls are from big corporations who buy lists from major sources or deal with the CMA / CDMA. Stopping the calls from small local business like window companies, roofers, landscapers and upholstery cleaners is a totally different approach.
Here is a good How-To from a forum called 800notes.com which I found completely by accident while Googling a phone number.
It took a few days to get over the jealousy from not thinking of this obvious tactic myself (since I consider myself an artist in lesson-teaching and vendeta escalations) but it would be worng not to share it with others.
After many ignored requests for a Window company to stop calling, this guy recomends that you play along and book an in-home appointment.
You make it a weekday between 6PM and 7PM to ensure the rep battles the worst of rush hour traffic. The rep migh even call you before the appointment form his/her cell phone - that's how you get their number.
When they arrive, you hijack the meeting by giving them copies of your "don't call" request letters (faxes/e-mails..) along with a new letter, and the copies sent to CRTC, BBB and their phone provider.
(if you get reps cell phone, you can also imply you will blog that number for other angry households to call at all hours ...)
This will be a very frustrating experience for the field rep (usually a comissioned contractor) who will have spent time preparing a presentation not to mention travel time and gasoline on a wasted trip - and he/she will give the aggravation back to the owners.
If reps keep getting bad appointments, you can bet the owners will feel the pressure to improve their list clean-up rather than risk losing a good salses agents.
exactly lol when they piss off my friend who work in the call center he whould call them at 3am and leave their number in the men wash room, pissing off the wrong telemarketer can be bad.babble123 said:I worked at a telemarketing centre this summer, and I have to say the best way to get removed from a list is to simple say "Please take me off your calling list" or "put me on your do not call list." Being calm and relaxed is the best way to do it.
If somebody screamed at me or was rude I simply placed them on "busy" option and set a call back for 5 minutes. And for people who think its tricking a telemarketer by saying something clever, like "I'll be right back", its not. We hear everything in the first week on the job. We know your not coming back to the phone, it gives us an excuse to take a break and relax. Nobody at my workplace got upset over anything a caller did, because none of use gave a shit what any random stranger thought.
Also, to the guy who thought it was smart to ask for the phone number like in Seinfeld, thats too old to work. We simply gave them a fake number quickly and said "I can't wait to hear from you sir, I'd love to discuss our offer in more detail. Have a nice day."
Its just a paycheck for the telemarketer, your feelings don't matter at all. Be polite and they'll be polite back. Be rude and they'll keep calling out of spite.






