Call Connection Service

This call connection service is provided by Directory Network Ltd and is in no way linked or affiliated with Good Garage Scheme. The direct number can be found here at a lower cost.

All calls to our directory and call connection service are charged at a flat rate of £6 plus your phone company’s access charge.

All calls to our directory and call connection service are charged at a flat rate of £6 plus your phone company’s access charge.

Our Service: Calling from a Landline? Have a pen & paper ready.

Large businesses don’t like customers making telephone calls, so make it as difficult as possible on their website to hide away the contact telephone numbers and instead push you through to endless FAQ pages on their website. Directory Network makes it easy. Just select the business that you want to be connected with, then, click the call now button and we will do the rest.

When you use our services, we confirm the price of the service to you on the call. In addition, we will also read out to you the direct contact number for the service that you call. We recommend having a pen and paper to hand so that you can write this number down and contact them directly if required. Following the call, if you called from a mobile, we will also send you a free text with the services direct telephone number on it.

Want to record your call with Good Garage Scheme? Directory Network offers a simple solution at no additional cost – simply select from the options to record your call and once the call is complete, we will send you a free text message with a link to your recording.

Our call recordings are sent to you by SMS once you finish your call. The call recording link is available for 30 days and we would recommend that you download the recording and store it in a safe place if you require it after the 30 day period.

If you are calling from a landline and wish to retrieve your call recording, you will need to use our contact form. Please tell us the telephone number you called from and an email address and we can send the call recording to you.

Directory Network connects customers to a wide range of businesses, including; travel, delivery services, catalogue and online shopping, mobile phone providers and energy suppliers.

We save customers time and connect you quickly through to the business that you wish to speak with.

The services mentioned on this website are provided by Directory Network Limited. We are not affiliated to or linked to any of the businesses mentioned on our website. We offer a call connection service

Good Garage Scheme

Customer Services

Address

Unit 7 Westwood House, Westwood Way, Westwood Business Park, Coventry, CV4 8HS

Phone

0247 647 4069

Hours

Monday - Friday from 9am to 5pm

Good Garage Scheme is a series of same name car garage monitoring schemes in the UK

Good Garage Scheme is a series of same name automobile repair garage monitoring schemes in the United Kingdom, claiming to improve industry repair standards for the benefit of consumers. The service is not run by an independent organisation, but by a company manufacturing lubricants and other automotive products, and any garage wanting to be a member is required to recommend and sell the products from this company. The scheme provides some benefits to customers for example accountability and feedback, however, the motivation and impartialness of the website has been called into question causing some controversy.

Initially, Trade Secretary Stephen Byers raised the idea for a government “good garage” scheme in December 2000. After Good Garage Scheme (government) was released in 2002, the motor industry sought to develop its own good garage scheme in May 2003 as a way of self-regulating its garage members. By 2006, the motor industry had not implemented its Good Garage Scheme (industry). At about that same time, Coventry, England based Forte Lubricants, a manufacturer of petrol and diesel-operated engine additives typically used in garages, maintained a website that supported Forte Lubricants’ own association of vehicle workshops/garages, where each member garage agreed to comply with some of the good garage scheme material published by the Department of Trade and Industry. The resulting Good Garage Scheme (Forte), an online self-regulatory body operated by Forte Lubricants for independent workshops and Minister for Transport Centres throughout the United Kingdom, has grown from about 800 member garages in 2006 to about 3,000 member garages in 2010.

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