I'm not trying to insult you, or be negative and I would agree with you if it wasn't for my attorney's advice, and for my first hand experience with Windstream and their almost identical contract with a client of mine. Their sales guy said the same thing. "Give us a minimum 30 days notice and we will cancel your contract when it ends." Well 12 months before the 3 year contract was set to expire we called them to let them know we were switching to TWC fiber, then 6 months, then 3 months, then 60 days, all notified via phone call and even a few times via email. All the reps we spoke to said we were good to cancel. Then the day of switch over we get TWC installed, called Windstream to cut off the services and they refuse to cut off and said we were auto renewed for a year term and had never told them we wanted to cancel, THEN and only THEN they stated we had to hand write them a signed letter by the company owner on a company letter head and snail mail them the letter to cancel the contract, and ONLY within the last 30 days of the contract. They continued to bill the client for 6 months at $600/mo and then after 6 months tried to take the client to court for past due payments (obviously since the client stated they no longer wanted their services). Some insane bs to where I will never resell Windstream ever again. It also taught me a valuable lesson about getting attorneys to help read and translate contracts before signing them.
Their contract was worded identically to Vantivs contract. "However if your initial term is one (1) year and you provide us with thirty (30) calendar day's prior written notice of termination, the above termination fee will be waved."
Their retention department could do the same as Windstreams and pull some bs "hand written by company owner on company letter head snail mailed to us" trick.
That termination fee which is written in the contract, starts out at $400~ (I don't have the exact contract in front of me anymore) but also increases based off some other variables. What reputable company charges clients for leaving them? I don't with mine, and neither does square, paypal, or stripe.
I had 3 attorneys look it over and highly advise against signing it.
I will agree I didn't see anything about monthly minimums though.
Just letting you know, you might want to have them edit their contract if they want people to sign on with them. Especially with the types of reviews easily found on google about them.
My experience with stripe has been A+. No hassle, no trouble at all. My only motive for switching was the lower rate, and the ability to swipe a card.
If you guys are working on ACH though, I imagine that'd be through stripe and really I should stick with them anyways.
