Small Business GOLD

If you're like most business owners with a website, you probably don't know if your website is helping you or not.
My Small Business GOLD newsletter will show you how to kick it's bum, wake it up, and get it working for you.
Oh yes. As a bribe, you'll receive special gifts and a free pony.

:
:


Subscribe now. You won't be spammed - and you can silence me forever with just one click if you get sick of me.
(Internet lesson #1:
Don't believe everything you read on the internet. I lied about the pony. But you'll still get special gifts.)

Learn something here?

If you found this site useful, please buy me a coffee to keep me awake while I write some more!
 

How I Used VOIP TO Slash My Phone Costs by 83%

You’ve probably heard about VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) recently.
This is a technology where you use your broadband Internet connection to make phone calls, instead of your normal phone system.

VOIP allows you to make long distance calls at a much cheaper rate than normally charged by your phone company. I can make a call to anywhere in Australia and talk as long as I like for 18 cents. (some VOIP providers charge even less – I’ll tell you why I don’t use them below)
Over the past 6 months I estimate that I’ve saved 83% on my phone charges, while enjoying the same call quality as a normal phone call.


International calls are also available for cents per minute. The cost varies depending on the country you are calling.
Here’s some tips:

  • Forget VOIP on the low speed 256kB ADSL plans. You need at least 512kb, and preferably 1.5mB speeds for acceptable voice quality.
  • The quality of the plug in USB phones using services like Skype, Engin, etc. can be poor at times. Noise, dropouts, and delays on the line made it quite unpleasant to conduct a conversation at times.
  • Best voice quality is obtained when you use a VOIP adapter (cost around $150) which connects to your router. Your phone (wired or cordless) can then be plugged into the adapter. If there’s a problem with ADSL, the call switches back to the normal phone line.
  • Use of an adapter effectively gives you 2 phone lines. If you are calling out on the VOIP phone, you are still able to receive incoming calls on the normal phone.
  • Configuration of VOIP adaptors can be complex, so make sure that support is available if you get one.

I tried several VOIP services, and finally decided on Internode ( www.internode.on.net ).

I changed to them a couple of years ago for my ADSL services, and don’t experience any of the problems I had when I was on the Telstra network. They are also cheaper, and can provide amazingly fast ADSL2 coverage in some areas.

Their VOIP system (Nodephone) is superior to other systems I have tried because it runs on its own network. The setup of the adaptor was also easy. Everything is preconfigured, and all I had to do was plug the adaptor into my router, connect the phone, and it just worked.

Some of the services like Engin and Skype are cheaper than Internode. However when I tested these services last year, the call quality was not acceptable to me. People told me that I sounded like I was talking down a long, hollow tube and sometimes there was a delay in the transmission which made it difficult to conduct a conversation.


Related Products:

1 comment to How I Used VOIP TO Slash My Phone Costs by 83%

  • Hi – I don’t comment on many web sites but had to on yours. It’s very well-done! I really like how you write – very to the point, unlike a lot of other journals. Thanks for having this site. I’ll bookmark it and visit regularly. Keep up the fine work!

Leave a Reply

 

 

 

You can use these HTML tags

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>