A Brief Background To Hosted Telephony
Hosted telephony has been around for ages since the 1960s, in fact. For many years it was run over ordinary phone lines, and this type of system is known as Centrex. Some of you may have heard of BT’s Featureline version of Centrex, which is still being used today. Featureline or Centrex is a phone system housed centrally back at the exchange that you can access using special phones connected to it over ordinary telephone lines. Compared to today’s internet phone systems, it’s a little clunky, but it still works well enough.
Hosted telephony over the internet, on the other hand, has had a difficult birth but has grown up and worked really well now. Some people call it a Cloud service, which indeed it is. Its origins go back to the early 1970s, but it took until around 2004 before this telephony became a credible service. With the advent of faster and more reliable broadband in the last few years, it’s now become a low cost and reliable service that is easily made available to domestic and business users alike.
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I love Hosted Telephony.
“There were around 155 million subscribers to internet-based telephony in 2013.”
I have been involved with Hosted Telephony for around 10 years, and I think it’s a brilliant service. I thought it was a fantastic concept the first time I was introduced to it. The trouble in the early days was that it didn’t work very well and the broadband available just wasn’t up to it. I have to say there were some harrowing moments in the early days, and VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) based telephony was pretty flaky. VoIP soon gathered a bad reputation amongst the early pioneers such that you would hear, “oh yes, VoIP, the business down the road had that put in, but it was rubbish, and they had to take it back out again, I’m not touching it.”
I remember the unreliable early days of mobile telephony and my first analog mobile phone. It’s often the same whenever any new service or product comes out. The early pioneers take the hits.
The Good News
Hosted Telephony over the internet has come of age.
The good news is that VoIP based Hosted Telephony is so much better now. Services are reliable, and quality is high, systems are flexible, and simple to set up. So much so that most providers can send you pre-configured phones that you can plug into your networks like any other device, and they will work out of the box. Some networks need a few adjustments, but most don’t.
With emerging high definition audio, the quality of calls is becoming much better than anything we have used before.
In some countries, this type of telephony is the dominant service shortly. Take-up in the UK is increasing with over 4 million subscribers in 2013, and this figure has likely exceeded 5 million by now. Much of the main BT trunking of UK calls is now over internet services, so it doesn’t make a great deal of difference any more whether you use traditional telephone lines or not.
But I Still Don’t Quite Get It; what Actually Is Hosted Telephony Over The Internet?
To explain more clearly…
Until the last few years, most businesses would buy a phone system that they would install on their premises and attach phone lines and phone extensions. A business would then have to maintain the system or pay a telecommunications company more likely. When they wanted to change something, they often had to get an engineer to do it. Capital expenditure was relatively high, and they would have to get a new system every so many year as technology moved on and as manufacturers stop supporting older systems. This cycle would usually run over 5 to 10 years.
Most domestic users wouldn’t dream of owning a phone system. Instead, they would usually have a phone line and phone that lets them access some of the services you get on a phone system, such as voice mail or call redirection.
Hosted telephony is a phone system but held in a computer server farm somewhere and maintained by the company that supplies the service to you. All you or your business needs to do is buy the appropriate phones with the service, and that’s it. If a phone goes wrong, you can get another one, change a few settings, and off you go, as if nothing happened. You can easily control the phone and your phone system account from a web browser or plug-in widget… from anywhere. It’s like many other apps we use these days. Maybe this sounds too simple, but that’s how it is nowadays, and it works!
Here Are 10 Reasons Why I Like It So Much!
1 – Low Capital Investment
Cost is a big bottom line for many. There’s very little equipment needed for IP-based Hosted Telephony. It would help if you had the phones, a decent broadband supply, and a switch, preferably a POE switch (one that can supply power to the phones).
Considering the lifespan of a phone system, a traditional phone system might cost twice as much or even more once it’s all installed. It’s unlikely that a hosted system will cost more, but even if it does, it will most likely be more convenient to install and use, which in turn saves time and therefore cost differently.
You can also use soft phones (use your computer to make calls), albeit they are not usually as good as a dedicated internet phone (IP phone).
Other Equipment
Just because I don’t want to miss these things out, you can use conference phones and business or domestic class wireless phones with Hosted Telephony too!
Most suppliers will have a range of phones from one or more manufacturers that you can use depending on whether you want straightforward phones all the way up to sophisticated color display phones with touch screens.
2 – Scalable
This is one of the most flexible things about Hosted Telephony. Most Hosted Telephony systems are billed monthly on a per-subscriber basis, so if you have 8 phone’s you pay 8 subscriptions. This is like having 8 traditional phone lines… in fact, it’s like having more than 8 lines as you can put people on hold whilst you talk to another and hold 3-way conference calls, so it’s more like having 16 phone lines available for when you need them.
Typically subscription costs will vary depending on the provider and the features you want, but this often works out less than a traditional phone line. With most providers, you can change the number of subscriptions you have each month, so if your business is 8 people this month, 12 people the next month, and 6 the month after that, you only have to pay for the number of subscriptions you use at those times. You may indeed need to buy the extra phones, but at least you only need to pay for services as and when you need them.
Extra features like call recording and operator consoles can be added and taken away as needed similarly.
3 – Mobility
For Hosted Telephony, mobility can mean quite a few things…
If you are based in London, you have a 0208 number; for example, you want to move to say Nottingham, no problem, unplug the switch and the phones, take them to Nottingham, plug it all back in again, and carry on. You would retain your 0208 number, and in theory, if your move was to Australia, the same applies.
Got an office with some people working from home? Maybe you have an apartment in Spain? That’s no problem either; each can have their own phone or soft phone wherever they are, and it’s still part of the same system. It’s worth mentioning that calls between phones on the same system are usually free, wherever they are, but again, this depends on the supplier.
Sometimes you are in the office, sometimes at home, sometimes at clients and sometimes in the car. Again no problem. You can set Hosted Telephony to follow you by ringing each of your phones in turn until you answer, or if you like, all your phones can be rung at the same time.
Some systems might have a little app that goes on your mobile to make it part of the system. More mobile phones are becoming available, which can make calls over the internet when available instead of the 2G mobile network.
Hosted telephony allows you to use numbers that are not in your area, so if you are in London and want to have numbers for Bath and Brighton, that’s no problem either. I don’t know if this is a good or bad thing, but it does mean that area-based numbers are losing their meaning, much as the mobile phone network by default means area numbers don’t make any sense.
4 – Easy to Maintain and Great Support
If you have your own on-premises phone system, you often end up paying for support. Support for when you don’t understand something, when you need something changed and when something goes wrong.
With Hosted telephony, much of that support comes with the subscription. The thing that you may need help with from your IT support is if there are problems with your network or broadband supply. Having said that, Hosted Telephony support will overlap with your IT support, and if your Hosted telephony supplier is supplying your broadband, then this area is covered.
Support should help you with how to do things yourself and be able to do them for you if needed.
5 – A Uniform Experience Everywhere
Let’s say you have a business with one main office and 10 branches. If you went down the traditional PBX route and opened the branches at different times, you might have various phone systems or maybe no phone system if the branch is tiny. These systems might not talk to each other at all or maybe partially. The different phone systems may work in different ways.
With hosted Telephony, none of these matters; the system works the same everywhere. Everyone can communicate with everyone else. It doesn’t matter if there is 1 person or 100 people at any particular location.
6 – Backup and Fail-over
Because the main system is usually hosted in secure duplicated environments, everything should back up for you from the system configuration to any recorded calls you might have. If the computer with your system fails, then another takes over, and you will notice little or no difference; chances are you won’t even know that anything happened.
But… what happens if your broadband goes down and some of your phones are disconnected from the system? That’s also not so much of a problem. Depending on how you want things to work, there are several ways in which inbound calls can still get to you. You can redirect calls to another phone in another branch, your own phone, or a colleague’s. If you already have calls following you or ringing your phones simultaneously, then those phones will continue to ring.
7 – Control from Your PC
Most Hosted Telephony systems can be managed by yourself either at an individual or system level. Some systems have a toolbar installed on Outlook, which controls much of the phone configuration, which many people find very convenient.
You can also control things by logging in from a web browser from anywhere, from menu items on your phone, and through older style star codes, e.g., *78 might activate Do Not Disturb mode.
From the web browser login, you can get reports on the calls going in and out of your system:
You can easily control many things in the system from anywhere without needing an engineer and without knowing much about telephone systems or how they work. The phone system becomes another piece of software for you to access.
8 – More Future Proof Than Many Other Solutions
From time to time, the system will be upgraded to fix any bugs that might still be in the systems (there are always some bugs in every computer system), improve existing features and add new ones. This will all be maintained for you. Systems could be quite different in 10 years, but you don’t have to worry about it. The only hardware you might want to change is the phones and the switch, but even those items can receive firmware and software updates so that they can go on doing their job for longer. Changing phone is a cost, but any disruption is kept to a minimum and can be phased if necessary.
9 – Bolt-ons For When You Need Them
Depending on your business and how you run it, you might want a few extra features such as call recording, call queueing, auto attendants, an operators console, and maybe even a wall board for a call center. You may need some of these only some of the time again; you only need to pay for what you are using when you are using it.
10 – A Low Carbon Footprint
Last and not least, like many Cloud services, you and your company will be doing your bit for the environment. The servers used with Hosted Telephony are usually high-quality enterprise servers that use less energy than others and reduce the carbon footprint.
You will probably be using phones that will use some power, but you won’t have a phone system control unit to run, so you will be using less electricity than if you had a more traditional system.
Each user takes around 90kbps internet bandwidth per call running over your existing network and possibly your existing broadband supply. Even if you need a dedicated broadband supply, this utilizes less infrastructure than multiple analog or ISDN phone lines and uses less energy.
So What’s Not To Like?
There isn’t much to like, but there may be situations where your own system might be better. With most Hosted Telephony business models, you pay by subscription, so if you have 50 users, then that might carry a high cost per month once you take the cost of broadband into account. On the other hand, a traditional phone system with maintenance, phone line rental, and depreciation might cost the same, perhaps more, perhaps less. It depends on convenience and how phone active people using it are.
If you have other systems that integrate with your phone system that perhaps Hosted Telephony cannot integrate with then, you may need an appropriate phone system in-house. Maybe you like to control your phone system and run your own in-house Hosted Telephony tailored more specifically to your business.
Trying Out Hosted Telephony
Depending on your supplier, you may be able to try Hosted Telephony out. At the very least, you can start with 1 or 2 phones to see how it all works. Some suppliers might lend you a trial phone and a subscription for a couple of weeks if they think you have a serious intent. A demonstration is easily possible.