February 6th, 2009 in FAQ | No Comments »
The Globe2 phones work on a similar prinicpal to Skype in that calls are routed over the Internet, but that is where the comparison ends. In our experience Skype is fine for personal use but not recommended for business use. Additionally Skype does not offer the same level of configurability of a non-Skype VOIP phone.
Please contact us for more information on how our phone system differs from Skype.
February 6th, 2009 in FAQ | No Comments »
It will ultimately depend upon your Internet connection. For ‘normal’ use it is possible to share a entry-level broadband connection between a computer and a phone. If the computer user starts to download videos or similarly high bandwidth media call quality may suffer. If you have mutliple phones and multiple computers the problem can be compounded. We suggest a single user and computer is fine, going above that we recommend a dedicated line for your phones to ensure optimum and consistent quality.
February 6th, 2009 in FAQ | No Comments »
Using a VOIP phone over a dial-up connection is theoretically possible but it is liekly that call quality would suffer. We recommend a broadband connection for business usage.
February 6th, 2009 in FAQ | No Comments »
Yes, that is no problem.
The main considerations when having multiple phones on the same connection are the Internet connection speed (the higher the number of users the higher the required connection speed) and the number of ports available on your router.
Some phones, such as the Siemens Gigaset, allwo you to run multiple handsets from one base station, so allowing you to amplify the number of phones you could plug into one router. The Snom range requires a direct connection to the router per phone. If more than four phones are needed youo can consider a switch to increase the number of ports you have available.
February 6th, 2009 in FAQ | No Comments »
Some VOIP phones operate as a roaming hand-held phone (such as the Siemens Gigaset) but ultimately all our VOIP phones require that you are able to plug the base station directly into the router. So, no, we cannot offer VOIP phones that operate on a wi-fi connection at this point.
February 6th, 2009 in FAQ | No Comments »
You can make and receive calls from anywhere where you have access to an Internet connection (and the router), so in principal yes. Depending on your location you may need to pay internationally which may have additional costs, please contact us for more information.
February 6th, 2009 in News | No Comments »
Welcome to our new site, we’re more adding information regularly so check back soon.
February 6th, 2009 in Case studies | No Comments »
AIM: Reduce costs.
PROFILE: A Swiss based company with an existing UK landline number diverting all incoming calls to their Swiss office.
SOLUTION:
Cost - Port the existing UK telephone number into the VOIP network and divert all calls to the Swiss office at a cost of ?0.015 a minute.
February 6th, 2009 in Case studies | No Comments »
AIM: The overall objective is to make it easier for international customers to call the sales department, as well as to monitor call usage.
PROFILE: A Spanish based company with a global client base.
SOLUTION:
International numbers - purchase numbers in France, Germany and Italy, and also toll-free numbers in the UK and USA. Calls are diverted to the Spanish office, with out of office hours voicemail messages in 4 languages.
Data management - supervisors can review call data showing numbers of incoming calls, call location and duration, with both a daily and a monthly summary.
February 6th, 2009 in Case studies | No Comments »
AIM: The overall objective was to reduce costs and improve call quality.
PROFILE: Multiple operatives calling the UK. Unsatisfactory line quality from a discount fixed line operator was negatively affecting productivity.
SOLUTION:
Cost - costs were reduced by purchasing a bulk UK call package. The average UK landline call cost, assuming the full monthly allowance is used, is ?0.003 per minute.
Quality - high end Snom 300 business phones in combination with a dedicated 6mb Internet connection provides call operatives with a line they can depend on for consistent quality.
ADDITIONAL BENEFITS:
Data management - supervisors can review call data showing numbers of calls, call location and duration, and break the information down by day or by operator.