Vodafone whistleblowers warned executives about plight of high street store staff
<span>Margherita Della Valle pictured at the 2024 Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona, Spain.</span><span>Photograph: Albert Gea/Reuters</span>
Margherita Della Valle pictured at the 2024 Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona, Spain.Photograph: Albert Gea/Reuters

Whistleblowers warned a series of senior Vodafone executives – including the current chief executive, Margherita Della Valle – that scores of its franchised store owners faced financial ruin about two years before a high court claim accused the company of “unjustly enriching” itself.

Vodafone employees made repeated complaints to their superiors about the company slashing commissions paid to the small businesses running the company’s high street retail network, according to a string of current and former Vodafone employees. The cost-cutting tactics resulted in a group of 62 of about 150 Vodafone franchise operators filing a £120m-plus legal claim last December.

The telecoms company, which is valued at about £17bn on the London Stock Exchange, has said: “We refute the [legal] claims but will be fully engaging in [a mediation] process with a view to resolving this commercial dispute.”

However, the emergence of warnings to senior management reveals for the first time how some of the mobile operator’s own staff appeared to support the franchisees over their own employer.

The drastic cuts to commission rates paid to franchisees, which were imposed as the country emerged from Covid-19 lockdown in 2020, were blamed for the small business owners running up huge personal debts and fearing for their livelihoods or homes, with some reporting suicidal thoughts.

The company says it apologises “unreservedly to anyone whose experiences while operating their business has impacted [their health] in this way” and added that “where issues have been raised, we have sought to rectify these and we believe we have treated our franchisees fairly”.

Della Valle, who has been Vodafone’s chief executive since December 2022 and was previously finance director from 2018, was notified of the franchisees’ plight around the time of her promotion, according to interviews and records seen by the Guardian. One email to Della Valle, which she appeared to respond to, cited an instance of an internal Vodafone whistleblower raising concerns about the company’s treatment of its franchisees.

Sources allege that some of the senior executives briefed about the franchisees’ grievances during that period included two members of Vodafone’s current UK board: Max Taylor, who was promoted to Vodafone’s UK chief executive last year and was previously its chief commercial officer from 2019; and Jon Shaw, who was promoted to commercial operations director in 2022 and who has worked for the business for a decade.

Vodafone said it disputed the term “whistleblower”, stating that the company has a transparent and open process. It said the company’s “Speak-Up process provides a safe forum for anyone to anonymously raise any issues or concerns they may have, which are picked up by a dedicated team … This process was used by one Vodafone employee in relation to the franchise programme and an immediate and thorough investigation was conducted.”