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Mining the niches: GotVMail grows
By Carol Wilson
Jun 29, 2007
A small Massachusetts company is discovering the joys of
mining the niches of the advanced services market,
delivering a virtual PBX service to small businesses
that is good enough to sell itself.
GotVMail Communications, based outside Boston in Weston,
Mass., has been selling its service to small and
home-based businesses and mobile professionals since
2003, and counts among its partners FedEx Corp., which
co-markets the service to its small business customers
at a discount, and the National Association of Realtors.
But 20% of the company's 40,000 customers are attracted
by word-of-mouth advertising from existing customers,
said David Powers, vice president of communications for
GotVMail.
The service is straightforward and automated to the
extreme. Customers sign up via a Web site and are
assigned a toll-free 800 number, for which they can
create a customized greeting. Multiple extensions can be
assigned such that incoming calls can be forwarded
anywhere, either to multiple sites within a distributed
business or to multiple devices including PDAs, cell
phones or VoIP phones. Callers can also leave voice-mail
messages, which can be delivered as MP3 attachments or
text messages to a cell phone or PDA, and can be viewed
on line as well.
"The idea is to give a small business the chance to look
like a big business," Powers said. "Most of our
customers have one to five, or one to 10 employees. They
may all work from home or they may be dispersed."
One major customer, Designscape.com, has landscape
architects in multiple cities but can use one number to
support its on-line sales, he said.
For the most part, GotVMail.com competes against
incumbent service providers and their voice mail
products, Powers said. Its service packages start as low
as $9.95 a month, however, which is much cheaper than
even residential phone service. Calls cost as low as 4.8
cents per minute. One booming market for the company is
eBay power sellers, who often operate out of their homes
but can manage transactions more professionally and
efficiently with a business telephone service. GotVMail
allows them to accept calls, with no busy signals,
around the clock, giving callers a customized menu of
options that can include specific information about a
company's products, location or hours, and the chance to
leave a message.
Advanced features include follow me capabilities which
allows calls to be routed based on the set preferences
of the customer, from an office phone to a home phone or
cell phone.
"We look at this as being a lot like the ASP
[applications service provider] model, but profitable,"
Powers said.
