Seen this and thought whoo somebody at ole Mobile-T is upset with ole Big Red no not me even though I have Red Hair ha ha it seem like they want Verizon Customers to try out there Service and here's how there doing it Follow the Link to Droid Life for the rest of the story
http://www.droid-life.com/2015/05/05/t-mobile-is-now-going-after-verizon-customers/
The way i read that article says to me that T-Mobile will pay your ETF ...IF you decide to stay with them past the 14 day period. If you do not, then you either pay Verizon the ETFs or, since the "win-back" dept still "exists" you could just go back to Verizon within, what is it, 30 days? Still, it might be just the bump some people need to give it a try. I guess too, a positive is that T-Mobile has no fee for trying and not buying since it said that they will refund any trial costs, along with any costs required for starting your service back up at Verizon.
T-Mobile is one of the absolute worst in my area for call quality and number of dropped calls. I would use two tin cans and a string before I would consider their service.
However, they are rapidly expanding in my area.
Personally I am on T-Mobile. My work line is Verizon. If Verizon had a plan around $300 unlimited Everything for 5 lines with phones or $250 without phones I would go back for my personal lines. Right now I have that with T-Mobile for $220 without phones.
All Verizon would have to do is have some kind of Unlimited Plan come about and there would herds of Customers jumping ship of the other 3 Carriers actually 4 I forgot to mention U.S. Cellular my Niece and her Husband Left U.S. Cellular even after 4G came into our Area because the way they were Hammering them on the Data that U.S.C said they were using..
Verizon wouldn't even have to do Unlimited LTE data. They could still have a throttled-after-cap plan detail or even rate the amount of data much higher for the same price, but remember, VZW is after the quality customer who sees the value in a strong reliable network and knows that to get that, they must pay a bit better. I guess it's a judging stick of sorts: if they did what the "lesser" carriers did, that would equate to a Mercedes dealership lowering prices to compete with Ford, at least in Verizon's eyes.
The customer gains and losses are getting interesting. I wonder how long Verizon will le T-Mobile gain more than a million more than Verizon per quarter?