Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...
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@dustinb3403 said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
@dashrender said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
Of course the assumption that there is CAT 5 or better everywhere is something else some might be making.
Relatively it's a safe assumption. Where there is a phone, there is a computer.
It could be all wireless I suppose. . .
I have about 50 phones that don't have computers. We are mostly WiFi here.
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@dustinb3403 said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
$34.25 for those phones.
That's insanely cheap for a new phone.
Damn
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@scottalanmiller said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
@dustinb3403 said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
$34.25 for those phones.
That's insanely cheap for a new phone.
Damn
Right?
If anyone complains about phone prices for their office I wouldn't have anything to offer them. How much more cheap could you get?
That's less than a dinner for 1 at most restaurants.
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Handset costs are not relevant here. His problem is bad internet service.
Bad internet service = no SIP
But as I said, the cost of POTS versus SIP needs calculated. Once you know that, then you can determine how expensive you can afford to go on your internet costs to get good service and still reduce your monthly spend.
Then you can look at handset options and determine a cost for that.
And then you can calculate and RoI for the project.
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@guyinpv said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
since they are an ecommerce, they do make a lot of outgoing calls to customers long distance.
wait, what? You're eCommerce business and your internet isn't reliable and you don't have a second connection? That doesn't seem to fit.
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@mike-davis said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
@guyinpv said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
since they are an ecommerce, they do make a lot of outgoing calls to customers long distance.
wait, what? You're eCommerce business and your internet isn't reliable and you don't have a second connection? That doesn't seem to fit.
Hopefully they are hosting their site.
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@coliver said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
@mike-davis said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
@guyinpv said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
since they are an ecommerce, they do make a lot of outgoing calls to customers long distance.
wait, what? You're eCommerce business and your internet isn't reliable and you don't have a second connection? That doesn't seem to fit.
Hopefully they are hosting their site.
I hope they are not hosting it and pay a provider to do so.
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@jaredbusch said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
@coliver said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
@mike-davis said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
@guyinpv said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
since they are an ecommerce, they do make a lot of outgoing calls to customers long distance.
wait, what? You're eCommerce business and your internet isn't reliable and you don't have a second connection? That doesn't seem to fit.
Hopefully they are hosting their site.
I hope they are not hosting it and pay a provider to do so.
That's what I meant. Thank you for clarifying.
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I've talked with Avaya. On this particular setup you can only have one greeting per voicemail box. It's just old.
I also talked with a dealer and their suggestion is to go to a VOIP system that basically uses IP phones on the internal network but the controller still functions externally over existing phone lines (since our ISP is spotty, no internet phones)
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@guyinpv said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
I also talked with a dealer and their suggestion is to go to a VOIP system that basically uses IP phones on the internal network but the controller still functions externally over existing phone lines (since our ISP is spotty, no internet phones)
Why talk to a dealer who is just out to get as much money as possible? How is his recommendation superior to a free, enterprise level option?
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@guyinpv said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
... the controller still functions externally over existing phone lines (since our ISP is spotty, no internet phones)
There is a standard bridging component for that that is dirt cheap. You don't base PBX decisions around that. I understand why your current ISP doesn't make VoIP on the WAN an option, but that shouldn't influence anything here.
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@scottalanmiller
They know stuff and I don't. -
@scottalanmiller said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
@guyinpv said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
... the controller still functions externally over existing phone lines (since our ISP is spotty, no internet phones)
There is a standard bridging component for that that is dirt cheap. You don't base PBX decisions around that. I understand why your current ISP doesn't make VoIP on the WAN an option, but that shouldn't influence anything here.
The boss makes the decisions, they don't want internet phones.
Not my ISP that doesn't make VoIP on the WAN an option, that's just what the dealer suggested, there is no need to use ISP for external stuff. -
@guyinpv said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
@scottalanmiller
They know stuff and I don't.All the more reason not to talk to them - the less you know, the more they are able to take advantage of that. You have good advice here in this thread from people not making money screwing you over. Don't get advice from sales people. Also, by going to an Avaya vendor, it was you that chose the solution, they just told you what you chose. If you don't know enough to define the solution, you can't know enough to choose which vendor to ask for a product.
Make sense? Avaya has one thing for you. Cisco has one thing. FreePBX has one thing. By choosing a salesman for one of them, you've already chosen the solution you will get told about, even if you don't know for sure that that solution is.
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@guyinpv said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
@scottalanmiller said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
@guyinpv said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
... the controller still functions externally over existing phone lines (since our ISP is spotty, no internet phones)
There is a standard bridging component for that that is dirt cheap. You don't base PBX decisions around that. I understand why your current ISP doesn't make VoIP on the WAN an option, but that shouldn't influence anything here.
The boss makes the decisions, they don't want internet phones.
I didn't argue with that. I'm telling you that the Avaya guy is preying on you.
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@guyinpv said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
Not my ISP that doesn't make VoIP on the WAN an option, that's just what the dealer suggested, there is no need to use ISP for external stuff.
Oh, the boss (head of IT) is burning his money on purpose and refusing a good phone system just to flaunt that he can? (Back to be "champagne budget and beer taste" comment.)
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By the way there are a lot of things at play here. We're in a leased commercial building, the landlord will have a say in how much infrastructure we can hack up.
The dealer says for some of their options we'd have to replace the phone jacks for example, landlord probably wouldn't like that.
It's their system. We only want better voicemail, it's not a complex need here, but we are used to the fancier phones, intercom system etc.I'm looking for the least intrusive and least expensive way to just bring an improvement to phone system without a whole infrastructure update.
@scottalanmiller said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
@guyinpv said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
@scottalanmiller said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
@guyinpv said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
... the controller still functions externally over existing phone lines (since our ISP is spotty, no internet phones)
There is a standard bridging component for that that is dirt cheap. You don't base PBX decisions around that. I understand why your current ISP doesn't make VoIP on the WAN an option, but that shouldn't influence anything here.
The boss makes the decisions, they don't want internet phones.
I didn't argue with that. I'm telling you that the Avaya guy is preying on you.
That's a pretty drastic suggestion on such a small potential client. So far she has done nothing but show me their options. Doesn't mean I have to buy anything.
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@guyinpv said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
That's a pretty drastic suggestion on such a small potential client. So far she has done nothing but show me their options. Doesn't mean I have to buy anything.
I understand that you are not beholden. But it's setting them up to mislead you. You admitted this is an area where the sales person knows more than you do. That puts them in the position of power. It is trivially easy for them to talk you into things that might be crazy (examples would be getting Avaya gear, getting an appliance, having the POTS lines go into the PBX itself, etc.) because you are not used to "what good looks like" or what the standard approaches or range of options are. Avaya sales people can't tell you anything useful here outside of a price, but engaging them at this stage means that they are well positioned to try to mislead you. It's just a dangerous way to go about things. You want to have a clear picture of what good looks like and go to the vendors with that in mind.
What you don't want is the vendors painting you a picture of how they would get you to spend money.
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@guyinpv said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
I didn't argue with that. I'm telling you that the Avaya guy is preying on you.
That's a pretty drastic suggestion on such a small potential client.
Right? that's my point. She's selling you something insanely expensive and risky to a tiny client that has no way to get value from it. That's how dramatically she's trying to take advantage of the situation. Anything beyond "free" is pure money grab. She's a salesman, it's her job to do this (see countless threads on this exact thing) but that's what she is doing. If she was a consultant, she'd be like "here are several free options better than anything Avaya offers". Instead, she's trying to see how much money she can get - and rightfully so, she's paid to see how much money she can get out of the clients.
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@guyinpv said in Small office phone setup, looking for improvements...:
The dealer says for some of their options we'd have to replace the phone jacks for example, landlord probably wouldn't like that.
You are telling me that the landlord has you in an decrepit 1990's wiring building and would be upset if you were to remedy that situation? That's crazy. You'd be fixing something he would HAVE to fix to get any modern business in there. Your office wiring isn't even at my home standards. The physical wiring plant is below the home line!