1. Home
  2. Companies
  3. Telus
  4. Shannonville
Telus

Telus outages and service status in Shannonville, Ontario

No problems detected

If you are having issues, please submit a report below.

Full Outage Map
  • Telus generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Shannonville, including 0 direct reports.
  • The most common problems reported in this area mention Internet.
  • 100% Internet (100%)

Telus offers phone, internet and television services, as well as mobile phone and mobile internet service through Telus Mobility. Telus internet service uses DSL technology. Telus TV relies on satellite or internet television (IPTV). Telus' mobile phone network supports CMS, HSPA and LTE.

Problems in the last 24 hours in Shannonville, Ontario

The chart below shows the number of Telus reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Shannonville, Ontario and surrounding areas. An outage is declared when the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line.

At the moment, we haven't detected any problems at Telus. Are you experiencing issues or an outage? Leave a message in the comments section!

Live Outage Map Near Shannonville, Ontario

The most recent Telus outage reports came from the following cities: Belleville.

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Belleville Internet 26 days ago

Community Discussion

Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.

Beware of "support numbers" or "recovery" accounts that might be posted below. Make sure to report and downvote those comments. Avoid posting your personal information.

Telus Issues Reports Near Shannonville, Ontario

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in Shannonville and nearby locations:

  • immacrecep
    i miss football. (@immacrecep) reported from Belleville, Ontario

    Anyone else with @TELUS lose all cell service? @TELUSsupport

Telus Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • milleni0wl
    🦉 (@milleni0wl) reported

    @TELUSsupport You know what? Enough of your bs apologies. Canadians want you to answer the phones, provide good service & to hire locals. Simple stuff! #telus

  • Ghf5wyh
    Zxcvbnm (@Ghf5wyh) reported

    @globeandmail Telus is such a dog **** company, we need US competition. Canadian telecoms barely have any canadians working for them

  • rickdou78681875
    rick douglas (@rickdou78681875) reported

    @Derekrants They're also in all three levels of law enforcement: Toronto Police, Ontario Provincial Police, and RCMP. They work in postal offices, Service Ontario, Service Canada, private security companies, communication companies (Rogers, Telus, Bell, etc).... They are everywhere.

  • heiba986627073
    heiba9866 (@heiba986627073) reported

    @markmandel007 @WestJet Westjet wanted cheap labor they got it. The agents in Telus El Salvador have a mediocre English level, they can't even understand a spelling, they work with "scripts" unnatural customer service, then they grow after 1 month of training without any experience in airlines at all

  • JR98726272
    Lionidas (@JR98726272) reported

    @MaretJaks We are doing the same now, not answering the door unless it is a neighbor. Random rail-thin black and brown men in their early twenties are knocking on our door claiming Unicef, Rogers, Telus, etc, i broken English. They look sketchy AF.

  • Richarddw56
    Richard Wilson (@Richarddw56) reported

    all you got was nothing for that wifi. that will be fix. new wifi router. telus will not be giving you the password. that is why you do not use cellphone data. they go to the cellphone company and steal all your passwords and hack you. they have the router.

  • UpdatesDao
    UPDATES DAO (@UpdatesDao) reported

    @empericalbeauty @TELUS @TELUSsupport They never responded to mail as well?

  • gothburz
    Peter Girnus 🦅 (@gothburz) reported

    I am the Director of Voice Experience Innovation at Telus International. Six months ago, my team deployed a real-time accent harmonization layer across our Southeast Asian call centers. The agent speaks. The system listens. The customer hears Ohio. I keep a demo reel on my laptop. Before and after. The before sounds like a woman in Manila who went to university in Quezon City and has been resolving billing disputes for nine years. The after sounds like a woman who might be in a strip mall in Columbus. Same words. Same syntax. Same problem-solving. The only thing we change is the part that makes the customer hang up. The metrics are on slide eleven of my board deck. I'm looking at it right now: Customer satisfaction: up 23 percent. Average handle time: down 40 seconds. Escalation requests: down 31 percent. My VP asked what drove the improvement. I said, "Reduced communication friction." Which is technically true. The friction was that our customers don't like talking to people who sound foreign. We didn't fix that. We made it so they never have to know. The system processes voice in 11-millisecond intervals. It maps phonemic patterns to General American English midpoint targets. Internally we call these targets "anchor voices." The anchor voices were generated from 4,000 hours of NPR pledge drive recordings. We picked NPR specifically because listener studies show it's the accent American consumers trust most with their credit card number. (The agent hears themselves the whole time. Their own voice in their own headset. They just know that somewhere in those 11 milliseconds, a machine decides that what they actually sound like isn't something a customer in Phoenix will tolerate for the length of a billing inquiry.) Employee 7734 in our Manila hub asked to hear the output. We played it for her in a breakout room — the one with the motivational poster about "Bringing Your Whole Self to Work." She listened for six seconds. Pulled her headset down around her neck. Went quiet. Then she said, "Is that what they need me to be?" Her CSAT scores are in the 94th percentile. She clocks in every morning at 7:45. I should explain the economics because they're elegant: we hired agents in the Philippines at $4 an hour. We spent $11 million on a system that makes them sound like they cost $35 an hour. The delta is the product. We don't sell accent correction. We sell the gap between what a worker costs and what a customer requires them to sound like. The system doesn't work in reverse. If a customer with a heavy accent calls in, we don't smooth their voice for our agents. Harmonization flows one direction. Toward the customer. Away from the worker. Always uphill. Three agents requested transfers to text-based channels last quarter. They said they felt "disconnected from their own calls." My HR partner coded it as an engagement issue. Recommended a team outing. Bowling, I think. Every morning, 14,000 agents open their mouths and a machine makes a decision about what comes out the other end. They perform the labor. We perform the correction. The customer performs their preference. Nobody performs anything wrong.

  • TSaundersql
    T Saunders (@TSaundersql) reported

    @mario4thenorth Telus, can’t Telus anything. That’s been my slogan for them for the last 15-20 yrs, after they tried lying to me on what an issue was with my service.

  • RaquelRktgirl1
    Raquel 🇨🇦 (@RaquelRktgirl1) reported

    @globeandmail Does it improve their service? Cause it's pretty lousy. @TELUS Filipino call centre is the worst. @amazon Filipino call centre is the best customer service.