Verizon Gives 13 Million Mid-Atlantic Customers Easy Access to 24-hour Online Service Center; Similar Access Slated for Customers in 15 Western States

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NEW YORK - Verizon's dynamic e-commerce Web site is easier to use than ever for 13 million more customers. The company is giving temporary user IDs and numeric passwords to all residential customers from New Jersey to West Virginia who are not already registered to use the site.

Customers in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia and Washington, D.C., will find computer-generated IDs and passwords printed on the top right-hand corner of their phone bills, starting this week, allowing them to use the site and its advanced features immediately.

In addition, several million more customers in 15 Western states will receive their temporary access codes over the next few months. Customers in New York and New England began getting codes with their bills in May.

"Our Web site, www.verizon.com, is already one of the most successful e-commerce sites in the country," said Jill Wagner, vice president of consumer marketing for Verizon. "By circulating temporary access codes, we're putting out the welcome mat and inviting new customers to sample the site and enjoy its features.

"Our customers do business with us on the site on their own terms -- 24-hours a day from any personal computer anywhere in the country -- and they love it. They shop. They order. They log repair requests. They review and pay bills. And they ask questions and get answers."

Upon visiting the site and using the codes the first time, customers will personalize both the ID and password. Normally, customers must first register to use the site, filling in an electronic form with security validation based on their most recent phone bill.

As always, Verizon is taking all necessary steps to protect customer information. This speedy registration capability still restricts access to customer information to that specific customer and does not change Verizon's security procedures. It just simplifies the registration process for the authorized user. Customers who use the temporary ID and password to go to the site and personalize access limit that access to only those individuals who know the codes. Alternatively, customers can call Verizon to deactivate the codes.

Verizon completely re-engineered its Web site 18 months ago.

"We migrated from the kind of catalog-brochure-corporate information site so common to businesses today to an actual business channel where customers research products and services available to them, enter their orders and find that the services are then automatically activated," Wagner said.

"Bill reviewing and payment is an extremely popular feature that offers customers instant access to billing data. For example, customers can view their calls based on time, day, number or other data. They can find the name associated with a called number listed on the bill. And, of course, they can make an instant payment via debit card or checking account number. Those who pay online also have the option of suspending their paper bills."

Customers who choose not to use the site and want the temporary access disabled can call their Verizon business office to have the codes deactivated. Until activated or disabled, the codes will appear monthly on the customer's bill. The randomly-generated password, however, will automatically change each month until the customer activates it.

Since the launch of the new verizon.com Web site, more than 3 million customers have registered to use the site, and nearly 5 million bills have been paid online. Verizon has logged more than 700,000 individual sales over the site, and consumers nationwide log and track more than 5,000 repairs each month. More than 100 million visitors have engaged the site over the period.

In 2002, Best Practices in Corporate Communications recognized the site as one of the most successful e-commerce tools in the marketplace.

In re-engineering the site, Verizon's Information Technology Group had to integrate the former Bell Atlantic and former GTE Web sites and develop an innovative plan to link dozens of normally incompatible back-office systems. The latest innovation is a software tool that allows customers who are moving to use the Web site to place an order to disconnect telephone service at their former home and establish new service at their new one.

Additional information about the verizon.com Web site is available at Verizon's online news center, www.verizon.com/news. Click on Verizon Service Standard on the right side for a profile of the site.

Verizon Communications

A Fortune 10 company, Verizon Communications (NYSE:VZ) is one of the world's leading providers of communications services. Verizon companies are the largest providers of wireline and wireless communications in the United States, with 136.6 million access line equivalents and 33.3 million Verizon Wireless customers. Verizon is the third-largest long-distance carrier for U.S. consumers, with 13.2 million long-distance lines, and the company is also the largest directory publisher in the world, as measured by directory titles and circulation. With approximately $67 billion in annual revenues and 227,000 employees, Verizon's global presence extends to the Americas, Europe, Asia and the Pacific. For more information on Verizon, visit www.verizon.com.

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