Debt collectors are chasing small businesses which fall into auto-renewing contracts they can no longer afford, the New South Wales Small Business Commissioner says, highlighting problematic behaviour by big-name service providers and the difficulty some smaller firms face when escaping lock-in subscriptions.
New South Wales Small Business Commissioner Chris Lamont says his office has written to subscription services on behalf of small businesses, which have complained of unfair treatment and unclear wording in business-to-business contracts.
In the worst-case scenario, major businesses are simply not providing the services promised to small businesses, Lamont said.
However, Lamont said his office is aware of multiple occasions where auto-renewing contracts have caught small businesses off-guard, leaving those traders exposed to debt collectors when they were unable to terminate their contracts early.
โA business might be unaware that theyโve signed up for another 12 months, two years, or three years, just because the parent agreement or the original agreement contemplates a notice period 90 or 120 days out from the expiry of a contract, and a failure to confirm a termination or an end period actually ticks over the the agreement for another another term,โ Lamont told SmartCompany.
Businesses have โsought to terminate outside of what the original agreement said, and then didnโt pay, only to be faced with debt collection activity from the provider,โ he continued.
โThatโs a really strong concern for me, because youโve got a small business thatโs said, โHey, we we either canโt afford or we donโt want this service anymoreโ.โ
โIโm not satisfied with thatโฆ I just think in this day and age than they should be a more sophisticated way of actually resolving that issue.โ
The time and cost involved in challenging unfair contracts also weighs against small businesses.
โSmall businesses, in many cases, are living hand-to-mouth,โ Lamont said.
โThey give up all too often and donโt challenge things, because the cost of challenging it may well be more, often greater, than the actual subscription fee or service.โ
Without naming and shaming, Lamont confirmed service providers on his officeโs radar include those in the technology, advertising, and marketing sectors.
Upgraded customer service a potential solution
Lamont has urged small businesses to take extra care reading and understanding contracts before they enter into them, potentially saving significant disputes in the future.
Not every communication from the NSW Small Business Commissioner has been met with hostility, either: some bigger firms have acknowledged mistakes, while other investigations revealed problems on both side of the dispute.
Even so, his office would like to see major businesses, with more resources at their disposal than their SME clients, consider alternate ways of responding to customers in tough circumstances before taking drastic action.
โWhat a lot of small businesses tell my team is that there is no way that they can actually escalate an issue in real time, or just speak to a real person,โ Lamont continued.
โIt seems to be determined largely by a suite of silence and obscure algorithms as to how they progress in the queue or whether they actually get their matter resolved.โ
The office of the NSW Small Business Commissioner has far fewer staff than some of the big businesses it has contacted, but endeavours to 80% of inbound calls within a minute.
โA very small agency like mine can do itโฆ I donโt see why big corporates canโt do that.โ
New legislative changes coming into action
Concerns out of the NSW Small Business Commissionerโs office arrive just weeks before new legislation, imposing upgraded penalties to businesses which include unfair terms in their standard form contracts, come into action.
Separately, the Treasury has opened consultation on unfair trading practices affecting consumers, including small businesses, as the federal government gauges the national appetite for a general unfair trading practicess ban.
The arrival of expanded penalties for unfair contract terms should cause businesses to re-assess their practices, Lamont said.
โBut I fear that potentially some of the international players, or some of the other known companies that have had a bit of a track record of this, might find new ways toโฆ not provide that customer interface that weโre seeking when things do go wrong.โ
NSW small businesses with lingering concerns can contact the NSW Small Business Commissioner directly, or file a report with the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission.