Recent Coverage

Big Company Sound, Small Company Feel
January 19th, 2007 by Carolyn Schuk
In her column the other day Paula Bernier of New Telephony posed
the question, "What's Really New in VoIP?" That was my thought
exactly after trolling through recent "news."
Skype has a new Internet video service. It brings validation to
the net as a platform for video, but it's news because it's
Skype.
In the race to zero, FuturePhone is offering free VoIP calls to
50 countries until 2010. SunRocket's offering once cent a minute
calls to Asia. Nice if you have overseas relatives.
Yet another service is offering WiFi VoIP calls on cell phones.
VoIP Service Blog has an item about using your Nintendo DS for
VoIP calls. Nimbuzz is offering a new IM service on mobile
phones.
And despite oceans of ink spilled on the Apple iPhone, nobody
has actually used or even touched one.
About the juiciest news lately was Talkplus' ShadowNumber
calling service, designed to accommodate your secret life - the
one your spouse doesn't know about. Now, maybe I'm a cynic, but
I confess to being skeptical that grownups are shocked, shocked
that VoIP is being put in the service of illicit liaisons.
Five years ago, of course, all of this would be headline news.
Today it's not even novelty.
But just because new breakthroughs aren't bursting on the scene
daily, doesn't mean that there aren't significant developments
in telephony. Take for example, GotVMail of Weston, MA. The
start-up company has skyrocketed to 35,000 customers of its
small business virtual phone system in three years using analog
telephony technology.
It's an interesting mix of marketing with old and new
technology.
Tellingly, the company doesn't call its service a hosted PBX,
which it closely resembles. GotVMail isn't about making phone
calls. It's about having a professional "voice" when customers
call regardless of what you're using to answer the call. The
company's tag line is "Give your small business a big company
sound."
It's a good example of understanding what customers get from any
product isn't the elegance of the technology - too often lost in
the high tech world. It's the value they get in terms of doing
business smarter, cheaper or better. In other words, more
profitably.
The value in this case is having a reliable "big company" phone
system that sounds professional, routes calls to the right
person, and lets people stay connected on the road. Hence, the
choice of analog technology.
"Calls go over the PSTN to our data center which is full of
tried and true analog technology," explains David Powers
GotVMail's VP of Communications and self-described chief cook
and bottle washer. "In the telecom business part of what
customers are buying into is an expectation that when you pick
up the phone anywhere you have a dial tone."
The company's business grew from founders Siamak Taghaddos' and
David Hauser's own experiences with phone systems in startup
companies.
"All of these [problems] had to do with putting network
infrastructure in place," explains Powers. "Both found out what
it's like being a small entrepreneur trying to get an issue
resolved with a Verizon. It's like the Lily Tomlin joke, 'we
don't have to, we're the phone company.'"
GotVMail is not just delivering phone service. It's delivering a
phone service uniquely tailored to small and home-based
businesses.
"We see ourselves as entrepreneurs serving entrepreneurs,"
Powers continues. "We tell people if there's a more
cost-effective way of doing business with us. When was the last
time Verizon called you and said, 'Let me save you money?'"
The guiding principal of GotVMail's design is that small
businesses have "infinitely finite resources," explains Power.
"The platform is built from the ground up for small business. We
weren't an enterprise telecom company going down market.
"We don't want them to have to buy anything except our service,"
he continues. "So what we set out to do is make our technology
talk to anything - landlines, cell phones, PDAs, smart phones.
We're technology-agnostic."
Why not a VoIP system? "I like what VoIP does for me, but I
don't want to spend $189 for every phone," answers Powers.
GotVMail's service looks to be a competitor for Grand Central.
In fact GotVMail is seeing a lot of transferred numbers coming
from the service, Powers reports. But while Grand Central is a
solution for the individual, GotVMail is a solution for
business.
Being in GotVMail's target demographic myself as a one-person
office, I decided to try out the service myself.
You sign up on the website with a credit card. You can transfer
an existing number, get a new number or request a 'vanity"
number. Alas, 1-800-CAR-OLYN was not available. So I went with
an assigned 877 number.
Calling plans start at $10 plus per-minute charges that range
from $0.048 to $0.074. You get 10 to 20 extensions with each
plan and can add new extensions in groups of five for $10 a
month. The average GotVMail customer pays $30 to $40 a month
total, reports Powers.
The service comes with a slew of built-in PBX features like
extension transfer, after hours calling mode, and music-on-hold.
Additional features like dial-by-name and information extensions
are also available at a $5 to $10 charge. You can forward calls
to up to six different numbers.
GotVMail has an online manual that steps you through setting up
your account. Account and extension management can be done
through a Web browser or the phone. The Web interface is simple
and intuitive and has a nice flow tree that shows you where you
are in the process.
Using the phone keypad to configure an extension is, well, no
more complicated than any other telephone system. And with
GotVMail's clear diagrams and spoken instructions to help you
along, at least you don't have to squint over mouse type in a
printed instruction book.
I can attest to the fact that the system is well designed for
its targeted audience of small and home-based businesses like
eBay "power sellers." From start to finish, setting up my
account took 19 minutes, including time for a do-over after
making a mistake.
