Better phone services for small businesses
Big company phone features are now affordable for SMBs
Small Business Tech
By
James E. Gaskin
,
Network World
, 10/24/2005
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"Let me transfer you to that number" is a phrase large companies take for granted and one that has long frustrated small businesses
with distributed workers. But with new services using voice over IP, small companies can now transfer callers to extensions
just like the big guys, even if that “extension” is in a home office six states away.
Leveraging the Web-based administration and quick configuration changes of broadband phone services, small companies can now
emulate big-company telecom features for tiny-company prices. Consider San Felipe Development and Mortgage Madness, customers
of GotVMail Communications, which started offering advanced telephony services in 2003.
Brian Crumrine, vice president and co-founder of San Felipe Development, runs a Mexico-based real estate development company
from his home office in southern California. Most employees work out of two offices in Baja, California, and Mexico, which
really means out at development sites. Everyone uses cell phones.
"People call our toll-free number, hear an automated listing of people and extensions, and choose what they want," Crumrine
says. The system connects them to that person's cell phone whether the employee is in California or Mexico. GotVMail treats
employee cell phones like extensions on the company telephone network.
Forty-eight of the company’s 50 employees are on their cell phones in a typical day. Luckily for Crumrine, Cingular interfaces
with a Mexican cell phone provider so San Felipe employees use one phone in both countries.
Crumrine chose GotVMail because it supported the features he wanted, including call forwarding and the ability to forward
voice mail to e-mail systems as sound files (usually in WAV format), a favorite feature of many Internet telephone service
users.
After testing, Crumrine signed up with GotVMail and pays $87 per month for 30 managed lines. There were no upfront fees, no
equipment to purchase and it is all managed via a Web administration utility.
Mortgage Madness is a bit more typical distributed small business. Based in Kelly McGovern's home office in Massachusetts,
the company handles contract mortgage paperwork processing for lenders all over the country and has four other employees who
work from their homes in Massachusetts and Rhode Island.
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