Anatomy of a Hosted VoIP Business Wichita KS

An emphasis on service and quality and focus on one market are keys to M5 Networks' success.

Local Companies

Integrated Voice Technologies, LLC
316-265-1000
1635 W. 37th Street North, Suite 4
Wichita, KS
Global Crossing
(316) 265-8700
9407 E Pebblebrook St
Wichita, KS
Uniformed Services Benefit Association
(913) 327-5500
10895 Grandview St
Overland Park, KS
Verizon Wireless
(913) 696-5121
10740 Nall Ave
Overland Park, KS
Mastec North America Inc
(785) 736-2891
408 Maple St
Axtell, KS
Kansas Media One
(913) 682-1356
422 Seneca St
Leavenworth, KS
Verizon Wireless
(785) 584-6158
13835 NW 54th St
Rossville, KS
S B A Inc
(785) 627-3280
Morland, KS
Verizon Wireless
(785) 582-2807
502 Lake
Silver Lake, KS

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Originally published at Internet.com


"Phone systems suck," said Dan Hoffman, CEO of New York City-based VoIP provider, M5 Networks, in a keynote address at last month's ISPCON in Orlando. Instead of a PBX, his company sells a powerful hosted service that we covered in more detail a couple of months ago (see Hoffman's M5nifesto).

As a regional and focused voice provider, he sees other regional voice providers as his competition (such as San Francisco-based Call Tower, Louisville, Ky.-based Smoothstone, and Herndon, Va.-based Cisco specialist PingTone). In fact, Smoothstone calls its service "Converged Communications as a Service" which is a more accurate description but a worse acronym than VaaS (i.e., "Voice as a Service," a term Hoffman has used).

Hoffman likes to compare his voice offering to Covad's. "Covad's in 70 cities. It's spending $15 million on marketing. It has too many products."

Hoffman said that his company has ignored business opportunities that would have lured the company away from offering a purely hosted service. "We ignored opportunities such as on-premises phones, trunking hybrids, large enterprise customers, residential and SOHO customers, wholesaling, new markets (we stayed in New York City and now Chicago), Exchange hosting and other products, and offering full call centers. We don't control the LAN. We don't solve printer problems."

The company focuses on small and mid-size businesses. It emphasizes building trust in business relationships (as opposed to being the first to offer a new technology). "For example, when we're asked how long it will take to provision a T-1 line, we say that, honestly, 80 percent of the time it takes four to six weeks, but some installs are early and some are late."

Hoffman said that companies buy a new phone system every seven years. So the company cultivates its prospects for the long term. "We want to always be at the table when that decision is made. But we hold our price. We are not cut rate. We do not use price to differentiate our service."

Asked about wireless, Hoffman said that his company does not yet support a wireless phone, and he also feels that voice calls on FMC (Fixed/Mobile Converged) systems are not yet up to M5's standards.

Asked who owns the equipment, Hoffman replied, "the router is ours. If you're a customer, you do not have a password, but you can buy another router for yourself. The customer buys the phones direct or from our VAR."

He believes that voice prices will be stable as bandwidth prices decline. "People are used to negotiating on telecom, but we believe that's about to end."

In summary, selling a service is good and profitable. If you're just selling bits, be prepared to lower your prices now and every year in the future.

Adapted from an article originally published on ISP-Planet.com

Author: Alex Goldman

Read article at Internet.com site

Featured Local Company

Integrated Voice Technologies, LLC

316-265-1000
1635 W. 37th Street North, Suite 4
Wichita, KS
integrated-voice.com