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Utility Warehouse

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
British multi-utility brand of Telecom Plus

Utility Warehouse
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryPublic utility,multi-level marketing
Founded2002
HeadquartersColindale,North London,,
Products
Number of employees
1400+
ParentTelecom Plus plc
Websiteuw.co.ukEdit this at Wikidata

Utility Warehouse is a multi-service provider based in London, England that usesmulti-level marketing to obtain customers through independent distributors.[1] It is a brand name of its parent company,Telecom Plus.[2][3] It currently handles approximately 1 million customer accounts.[4] Utility Warehouse supplies customers withlandlinetelephony,mobile telephony,broadband,gas, andelectricity.[5] The Utility Warehouse brand is the primary engine of revenue generation for Telecom Plus.[3]

History

[edit]

Telecom Plus, aFTSE 250 company, established Utility Warehouse in 2002[6] as a subsidiary and brand to encompass all of their residential energy, telephony and broadband offerings.[7] The Utility Warehouse headquarters is inColindale, North London.[8]

In 2006, UW and Telecom Plus entered into an agreement withnpower, under which npower would supply energy (gas and electricity) to UW customers.[3] UW sold its two subsidiaries (Electricity Plus and Gas Plus) to npower. A 2009 article byThe Guardian reported that Telecom Plus's rates were generally average, and as much as 20% higher than the best deals.[1]

In 2013, however, npower sold the two former Telecom Plus subsidiaries back to Utility Warehouse for £218 million.[9] As a result, Utility Warehouse became one of the largest independent energy suppliers in the UK.[3][9] The deal sparked commentary about the possibility of npower's parent company RWE leaving the UK, or the emergence of a "Big Seven" in place of the existingBig Six energy suppliers.[2][3][10] In 2023, UW reported that it was the seventh largest energy supplier in the UK, supplying around 3% of UK households.[11]

In 2021, UW agreed to pay £1.5 million intoOfgem's redress fund, after an investigation begun by Ofgem in 2018 found that since 2013 the company had not given sufficient support to customers in payment difficulties.[12]

In 2023, UW had over 360,000 broadband customers and over 420,000 mobile telephony customers.[13]

Products

[edit]

The company supply Residential and Business customers. Its telephony and energy services are often bundled to reduce costs for customers.[9]

Business model

[edit]

Utility Warehouse employs an independent distributor model[14] that utilises self-employed partners to obtain new customers. Distributors introduce both residential and business customers.[7]

Utility Warehouse has no shops and does not advertise on television or in the national press. The company usesword-of-mouth as a primary means of promotion, and offers bonuses to distributors who recruit new customers and distributors.[8]

Distributors gain a commission from their own customers and their distributor's customers, making Telecom Plus a multi-level marketing company. There is a joining cost to become a distributor (reduced if they become, or already are a customer). A 2017Guardian investigation found that total commission paid to distributors in the previous financial year was £21.1 million, or less than 3% of revenue; if that amount was divided equally among the 41,717 distributors they would each receive £505 per year.[15] Utility Warehouse responded that the calculation was misleading: "there are many who for whatever reason earn considerably less than £500 per year, and there are those who work at their business extremely hard and earn considerably more than this".[15] In 2019, the average distributor earned £12 a week, prior to taking costs into consideration.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcJones, Rupert (7 December 2019)."Utility Warehouse: is its 'life-changing' scheme really ab fab?".The Guardian.
  2. ^ab"Npower sells some subsidiaries to Telecom Plus for £218m".BBC News. 20 November 2013. Retrieved12 March 2025.
  3. ^abcdeGosden, Emily (20 November 2013)."Utility Warehouse buys 770,000 customer accounts from npower in £218m deal".The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved6 October 2014.
  4. ^"Trading update and notice of results". Telecom Plus. 11 October 2023.
  5. ^Macalister, Terry; Rankin, Jennifer (20 November 2013)."RWE npower supply sale raises fears over UK withdrawal".The Guardian. Retrieved12 March 2025.
  6. ^"Utility Warehouse Limited".Companies House. Retrieved4 June 2020.
  7. ^abTieman, Ross (13 March 2009)."Company of the Year: Telecom Plus".Financial Times. Retrieved6 October 2014.
  8. ^abStafford, Philip (29 March 2009)."Telecom Plus boosted by word-of-mouth support".Financial Times. Retrieved7 October 2014.
  9. ^abcChazan, Guy (20 November 2013)."Telecom Plus deal to challenge big six UK energy suppliers".Financial Times. Retrieved7 October 2014.
  10. ^Gosden, Emily (20 November 2013)."Energy challenger Telecom Plus leaps to Big Six's defence".The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved6 October 2014.
  11. ^"Telecom Plus PLC: Half-Year Results".London Stock Exchange. 30 September 2023. Retrieved28 November 2023.
  12. ^Earl, Nicholas (10 November 2021)."Utility Warehouse pays £1.5m to Ofgem fund after failing customers in debt".City A.M. Retrieved8 December 2021.
  13. ^Jackson, Mark (21 November 2023)."Utility Warehouse Top 363,595 UK Broadband Users and Change CEO".ISPreview UK. Retrieved28 November 2023.
  14. ^"Telecom Plus's dividend yield is appealing - Investors' Chronicle".
  15. ^abJones, Rupert (8 July 2017)."Get rich quick? Not with Utility Warehouse".The Guardian. Retrieved12 March 2025.

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