Recent Coverage
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April
2006
Virtual Help Line
When Kelly McGovern started her mortgage service
business six years ago, she set up shop in an office
downtown. It seemed like the professional thing to
do, but as Kelly discovered, it was a real waste of
money. "I was out of the office most of the time
anyway, visiting clients," she says.
The business, Mortgage Madness, took over Kelly's
home office in 2002. While it was comfortable and
economical, the office lacked the sophistication of
a successful business. "It was obvious that we
needed some type of phone system that could answer
and transfer our calls," says Kelly, who by then had
hired three employees, each of whom would be working
from their own homes. Most business-style phone
systems, she learned, would cost thousands of
dollars and would require special hardware and
software to be set up at each employee's office.
Then she stumbled upon VirtualOne from GotVMail.
Based on instructions Kelly and her employees post
on their secure individual GotVMail web page, the
VirtualOne service answers incoming calls, directs
callers to the appropriate extension, transfers
calls between extensions and sends calls to Kelly's
cell phone when she's on the road. The transfer
happens so seamlessly that the caller never suspects
he's being redirected to a totally different office.
"Many people have commented on how big the business
has become," says Kelly. "We're really just more
efficient."
Caption:
Kelly McGovern may be all alone in her home office,
but she can transfer incoming calls to her employees
as if they were seated in the cubicle next to her. A
unique virtual phone service portrays the image of a
traditional corporate office but offers Kelly the
economy of having her employees work from their own
homes.
