Do You Need VoIP? Tampa FL

The best phone system for your business is the one you've thought about carefully. Consider VoIP and whether or not it's necessary for your business with these ideas and suggestions.

Local Companies

Telovations
813.321.1000
1410 N. West Shore Blvd., Suite 700
Tampa, FL
Video Home Phone - ACN Independent Rep
813-966-3118
1 Anywhere United States
Tampa, FL
EL OBELISCO
18136001900
P.O.Box 2314
Tampa, FL
BroadSource Technologies Corp
813-969-0066
8870 N Himes Ave # 319
Tampa, FL
Proximiti Communications, Inc.
407-287-6487
5410 Mariner St. Ste 175
Tampa, FL
CommX
813-933-6767 x262
3550 Buschwood Park Drive
Tampa, FL
BroadRocket Communications
727-254-5854
3438 East Lake Road
Palm Harbor, FL
PBXhosting
813-333-9644
29724 Bright Ray Place
Wesley Chapel, FL
Verizon Wireless Inc
(813) 615-4600
100 Tampa Oaks Blvd
Tampa, FL
Allegiance Telecom of Florida
(813) 626-5597
8230 E Broadway Ave
Tampa, FL

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Originally published at Internet.com


Do you really need it?

The first question is why are you even thinking about implementing some form of VoIP?

This is trickier than it sounds because of all the hype from hordes of over-enthusiastic vendors. You also have to beware of your gearhead tech staff-it is good to have IT staff who are into technology and who like to explore new things, but you have to balance enthusiasm with real needs.

Suppose you are an accounting firm with a staff of fifteen people. You all work in a single location, and you have a receptionist who answers calls and receives visitors. You don't want to replace your human receptionist with some robo-attendant, because your customers expect personal service. The human receptionist screens calls and answers a lot of questions himself, without having to pester the accounting staff for every trivial thing, so he more than earns his keep. Your customers are all local, and you don't make a lot of toll calls. None of your staff needs to be on call when they're off duty; it's just a nice normal office where, when your people go home for the day or go on vacation, they're really done with work. In this scenario all you really need is a simple local PBX that handles multiple lines and voicemail.

There are several options for implementing this. If your office is in a business park, you probably have a shared PBX system. Your local telco might have an attractive service package.

If, however, you really really want to dip your toe into the VoIP waters, any of the systems we've covered here at VoIPplanet make good local servers. But running your own iPBX is different from administering a traditional PBX system, because it requires both computer networking and telephony skills, different hardware, and a squeaky-clean network.

On the other hand, it's lot less scary and less work than it used to be. The current batch of popular standalone VoIP servers and PBX-in-a-box offerings, such as Trixbox, sipXecs/SIPxchange ECS, AsteriskNOW, and PBX in a Flash (I know there are more, feel free to write to me and tell me about yourself) are considerably easier to administer than a traditional PBX system. Hybrid-hosted systems such as PBXtra are exceptionally easy to set up. Any system or network administrator of average skills can handle these.

Even if you think you'll never need more than a local iPBX, there are advantages to migrating away from a traditional PBX system. It's the first step in preparing for the future, and it opens up a whole new range of options. You can use any mix of analog, digital, and IP phones, and you can migrate at your own pace. This flexibility extends to mobile users, with highly configurable call forwarding to virtually any device, voicemail-to-email, faxing, and text-to-speech.

I want cheap long distance

Tread carefully here and do your math, because telephone calls over the Internet are a whole different ballgame, and the savings are often not what you're led to expect. You don't want to be like the people who go ballistic every time a first-class stamp goes up a penny, and they protest by driving all over town to hand-deliver letters. There are a lot of ways to get inexpensive long distance on the traaditional phone networks. Call quality on Internet calls is still inconsistent-sometimes it's fine, sometimes it's horrible. Is it worth saving a few dollars to risk alienating your customers? As always, you get what you pay for. Ignore all those insanely optimistic TV commercials and start with your telco. You want to deal with whoever controls the wires, not some third-party service provider who resells bulk minutes, and who gets shunted to the end of the line.

What about Skype, you ask? Skype offers a number of advantages: excellent call quality and encryption, conferencing, free individual accounts, low-cost business services, and pretty decent video calls and mobile services. It's an easy and inexpensive way to get good VoIP services. The two big downsides are it's a closed network, so you can only talk to other Skype customers, and it does not integrate with Asterisk or other VoIP servers. One way to benefit from Skype is to use it to talk to a select group, such as remote partners, employees, and road warriors. You could have a public Skype number (DID) for your customers, in addition to your other contact numbers. I wouldn't rely on it exclusively unless you only want to do business with other Skype users.

So the moral of the story is start with thinking about what needs you want met and how can you create a more pleasant experience for your customers and staff, rather than trying to shoehorn this new whizbang technology into your business just because it is new and whizbang. If an inexpensive multi-line answering machine with conferencing meets your needs, stick with that and be happy.

Author: Carla Schroder

Read article at Internet.com site

Featured Local Company

Telovations

Telovations Managed SIP Trunking

813.321.1000
1410 N. West Shore Blvd., Suite 700
Tampa, FL
www.telovations.com

Telovations provides businesses with cost-effective communications solutions that enhance productivity. A facilities-based competitive local exchange carrier, Telovations delivers advanced features and software applications over its Real-Time Network™.

Services are sold in customized packages that include applications and hardware bundled together in one affordable and predictable monthly subscription.