Finding
Phone Answers For The Very Small Business
Start-ups, small growing firms and
even home-based businesses are underserved by the telecommunications
industry. But there are telephone systems that fit if you know where
to look.
Telephone systems have grown in sophistication
by leaps and bounds in recent years, but for the most part, very
small businesses have been on the outside looking in. And with the
recent evolution in Voice over IP telephony (VoIP), the gap between
what small business needs and what the market is offering is only
getting wider.
While galloping technological advancements
have ushered in amazing new features and inversely lower prices
for most office equipment, full-featured phone systems have remained
largely out of reach for small companies. You can afford a photo-realistic
slimline desktop color printer now for a fraction of what it cost
just a few years ago, and you can beam your appointment book back
and forth from your wristwatch to your laptop for under a hundred
bucks, but the prices of telephone systems have not decreased at
the same rate. Most small companies are forced to cobble together
telephone solutions with a combination of multi-line telephones,
answering machines and costly monthly telephone company services.
True phone systems are far more powerful,
offering flexible automated call answering features, call messaging
and call routing that can improve a company’s professional
image, control communication costs and increase connectivity and
responsiveness.
It is widely acknowledged that small
business is the engine of job creation and economic health today.
With a sophisticated, mobile workforce and limited resources for
dedicated phone answering staff, small business needs advanced phone
systems as much as its larger counterparts do. Yet according to
a recent Yankee Group study, 58 per cent of small firms in the United
States don’t have a phone system at all. More than 5 million
businesses have fewer than 20 employees, so there’s a big
market for phone systems, but the leaders in the phone industry
have never been able to produce products to fit the bill.
Why? The answer lies in the size;
small business is too small for the big traditional telephone systems,
and the scaled-down solutions that the industry has produced so
far still have price tags that are too big for small business budgets.
Big phone systems just don’t work for very small companies,
and the fewer the phone users, the more difficult the fit.
Private Branch Exchanges
Large corporations use Private Branch
Exchanges, or PBXs, which allow many phone users to share a system
with fewer telephone company lines, based on the idea that not everybody
uses their local phone extension at the same time.
PBXs inherently offer the best telephone
system functionality available. As anyone who has ever worked in
a corporation knows, PBXs handle calls impressively with features
such as ring groups, call cascades, auto attendants, voicemail and
more. But PBXs have traditionally been massive systems for thousands
of users. When PBX manufacturers started to turn their attention
to small companies, they found it difficult to scale the concept
down. The big companies that make PBXs are not focused on very small
business, so they don’t fully understand the space.
The result has been a little like
a major auto manufacturer stripping a car of two of its wheels and
most of its body and then trying to enter the bicycle market; the
results are ungainly and overly expensive. Small business phone
systems from the major PBX manufacturers tend to be intimidating
and difficult to use, difficult to install and usually require technical
staff or consultants and expensive, proprietary phones.
Limited Small Business Solutions
So where are small companies without
phone systems getting their voicemail? How are they handling incoming
calls? How do they integrate teleworkers and mobile workers? They
may use Centrex services; telephone company voicemail and separate
lines for each phone user, which add a big boost to the monthly
phone bills. While telephone companies all over the country are
all too happy to offer increasingly complex business services, the
additional billing can add up over time to prohibitive levels.
And there’s no real integration
with offsite workers other than simple call forwarding. The proliferation
of cell phones in the majority of small businesses has, paradoxically,
made staying in touch with customers and collaborators even more
difficult. Businesses have to give customers and co-workers different
phone numbers for the office and mobile phones, each with separate
voicemail systems, both of which are costing the company extra money
every month.
Finding Phone Systems that Fit Small
Business
Not all of the news is bad, though.
A select few companies have realized that the very small business
is underserved, and they’ve been producing small business
systems that make sense. There are excellent systems to be had in
the market, if you know what to look for. The smart new generation
of small business phone systems have all of the features of their
larger counterparts without the big business prices.
When shopping for a system, look
for the ability to easily install and configure it on your own.
Installation can cost a significant percentage of the total cost
of traditional phone systems. User-configurable systems allow you
to control the way your phone system works without having to pay
the manufacturer or a third-party technician to do it for you. The
best of the new small business phone systems enable you to do it
yourself and save.
Another important feature to look
for is cell phone and remote phone integration. If you have teleworkers
and mobile workers, you need to be able to collaborate smoothly
without giving out dozens of different numbers to your clients.
There are small business systems on the market that can connect
all of your phones through one central system with one number.
Expandability is crucial too. Make
sure that the system you buy today can grow to accommodate the changes
in your company tomorrow. And the changes in the industry —
with the emergence of Voice over IP technology and new advanced
Internet telephony services, your phone system needs to be ready
to connect to the IP network while maintaining your connections
to the traditional telephone network. Look for hybrid systems that
are built with SIP standards to ensure compatibility and avoid obsolescence.
One promising entry in the field
is the TalkSwitch system by Centrepoint Technologies. TalkSwitch
is a hybrid phone system that offers IP and traditional telephony,
and it’s designed specifically for businesses with as few
as one and as many as 32 phone users per location. Available online
and through resellers, system integrators and interconnects, the
compact, user-friendly TalkSwitch is a prime example of the next
wave of systems that provide the power of PBX at prices that small
business can afford.
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