Is VOiP the right
Phone Solution for Me
There are five
key points to determining whether VoIP meets your phone
needs:
Is VoIP the right phone solution for me?
There are five key points to determining whether
VoIP meets your phone needs:
1) Service needs to be reliable.
Phone service is something we count on being
there when we need it. When the power goes out, unless you use
a powered phone, you can pick up the receiver and get dial
tone. This is a comforting feeling, knowing you can reach
people in an emergency. VoIP can't provide that level of
reliability yet, unless you have a backup generator on your
property. This isn't as vital with the prevalence of cell
phones, but still a concern for some people. For VoIP to work
reliably your power company and ISP must also be reliable. If
either have frequent outages or frequent seasonal outages due
to storms, VoIP may not be your best choice for phone
service.
2) Sound quality needs to be
exceptional
Cell phones are the one technology that we
seem to accept poor service from. Calls still routinely drop
and there are major dead areas with no service in many parts of
North America. For VoIP, we rightfully create landline service
expectations right down to call quality. If you try a VoIP
service and get latency don't use it unless the service is
free. Vonage and VoicePulse both deliver great call quality
that meets or exceeds landline service.
3) Hardware requirements need to pass the
spouse test and the newbie factor
This one is a little vague, but unless your
spouse is a geek, he or she will not want to plug in a USB
headset or handset and talk at the computer. Fortunately most
VoIP services now offer alternatives that mimic or are landline
phones. I chose Vonage for my home service specifically because
I could use a traditional phone to place and receive calls.
4) It needs to be easily portable to a new
residence
While cellular service is more portable than
either landline or VoIP service, VoIP is a close second. In the
case of my current Vonage setup, I can disconnect the Linksys
Phone Adapter from my home network, connect it to another
network and bring my phone number with me. Unlike landline
service, I won't get charged a fee for the privilege of keeping
the same number when I move from my current residence to a new
one. Even better, for an extra fee Vonage will provide me with
a second number in another area code for $4.99 per month, which
might be attractive for people like me who live in one state
and have family in another.
5) Pricing needs to be affordable
For me, this is where VoIP made the slam
dunk. I get all the calling features of a landline phone
service, including call waiting, caller ID, call forwarding,
and 3-way calling, as well as services like *69 that a
traditional phone company might charge for. On top of
traditional phone services, I get voicemail delivered to my
email or to my cell phone and cool features like Click2Call
from Vonage that let me select a number from my Outlook
contacts and pre-load my phone to call the party without ever
dialing. The price is more attractive than any landline service
I've had in the last five years, with the added bonus of free
long distance.
Many of the references I make here are in regards to
the Vonage service, but similar features are available with
most other commercial VoIP phone service providers.
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