SunRocket Who? SMBs Love VoIP
by
Dan Baldwin [7/27/7]
The failure of consumer VoIP provider SunRocket will not cool the
love affair between small- and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) and
VoIP. The attraction to VoIP is especially strong for new and
expanding SMBs looking to buy a phone system.
Since re-engaging as an agent two months ago (after a 5-year absence
from the trenches), I was surprised to discover the acceptance of
VoIP dial tone by businesses across the spectrum. An old call center
customer of mine had installed a VoIP IP-PBX Asterisk server with a
dozen SIP trunks feeding it dial tone over his dedicated Internet
access T-1 (DIA) I sold him. The SIP service he was using was from a
business associate who had purchased & installed his own VoIP soft
switch.
As a dial tone sales person with a major San Diego interconnect, I
field inquiries every day from new businesses and expanding
businesses that need to order new or additional dial tone.
Ninety-five percent of all businesses ask about VoIP. If they
already have a non-VoIP phone system they want to know if they
should switch their company to VoIP or install SIP trunk service
into their existing phone system. It's like they all want to be able
to tell their business associates how cool they are because they use
VoIP for their dial tone. Many small businesses I talk to call not
to learn about VoIP but to add more bandwidth and more SIP trunks to
the VoIP system they've already setup for themselves and are using
successfully.
During my 5-year break from selling dial tone I thought business
owners hated the idea of VoIP dial tone in their business because of
all the bad press consumer VoIP has had - and continues to have. I
was wrong. Business owners seem to know that the VoIP providers
having trouble are all in the consumer space. It's like they're
thinking, "Of course they're having trouble - they're trying to make
a living selling service to cheap skates!" The fact that many sad
Vonage investors are loosing their money does not seem to dampen
small business owner's desire to claim the benefits of VoIP dial
tone for their own business.
I think the main reason for the acceptance of VoIP in the business
dial tone realm is the IP-PBX. It's all about control. Nothing it
seams frustrates a business owner or manager more than having to
call their interconnect to make a small "move, add or change" (MAC)
to their phone system and then having to pay $150 for it. Just as
many business owners forgo the luxury of a secretary because they
can now use their own computer to send a letter or email, business
owners see VoIP (SIP trunks in an IP-PBX) as their opportunity to do
their own MAC orders and forgo sending $150 to an outside company
for every MAC in the future.
And it's not just the early adapters. I'm selling VoIP dial tone in
the form of SIP trunks to real estate agents in North Carolina and
credit unions in Indiana. They see the decision to try VoIP or SIP
as basically risk free because if it doesn't work they still have
the option of putting regular dial tone (analogue lines, PRIs or
regular voice T-1s) into their newly acquired IP-PBXs . Most figure,
"Hey, I'm ordering broadband Internet anyway why don't I try VoIP in
my new IP-PBX phone system by ordering SIP trunks."
But it's not just new & expanding businesses who just bought an
IP-PBX who love VoIP. Almost all of our larger customers with
existing non-VoIP phone systems using regular analogue or digital
dial tone all want to hear about how they can start integrating VoIP
as they order new dial tone. I spend as much time talking people out
of VoIP as I do selling VoIP. (I doesn't make sense for many
single-location businesses to add VoIP trunks to their non-VoIP
phone systems "just to be cool.")
While I certainly feel bad for everyone who lost money on SunRocket
or Vonage I don't really think the bad news affecting consumer VoIP
will cross over to business VoIP. For small businesses buying a new
phone system, IP-PBXs trunked with SIP dial tone is almost a no
brainer. No amount of bad consumer VoIP news will affect the love
affair small business is developing for VoIP.
Note: ATEL explains how VoIP and SIP trunks work in a phone system
so often that we actually made a video to send to our customers and
prospects.
Click here to view the video yourself or visit
www.ATELcc.com.
Dan Baldwin, founder of
TelecomAssociation, is Director of Sales at
ATEL Communications Inc. Founded in 1985, ATEL is the largest NEC
telephone equipment dealer in
Southern California.
Dan works with ATEL's carrier services division that acts as an in-house
telecom master agency to sell network services to ATEL's embedded base of
2,000 phone equipment customers. For more information about ATEL's carrier
services division please visit
www.ATELcc.com.
Got an experience that
complements this blog posting? E-mail printable submissions to
Dan@ATELcc.com.
Want to respond or add
to this blog? Send printable replies to
Dan@TelecomAssociation.com