VoIP Internet Phone Services Grow
The new technology surrounding Voice
over Internet phone plans (VoIP Phones) and all
the different ways they can deployed in home and
office environments, makes VoIP confusing to a
lot of people. For home users and cell phone
customers, it is very simple to use and no
knowledge of VoIP technology is needed. Yet,
VoIP usage is still not at the level many
industry experts thought it should be. The VoIP
consumer marketplace is competitive with phone
companies and VoIP providers battling for the
consumer's minds and wallets. As long as
consumers are content and don't understand VoIP
service and its value, the big phone companies
can keep charging excessively high phone call
rates and providing fewer services.
Many consumers still lack the information about
VoIP phones and Internet phone service plans
they need to make a shift to VoIP. Many will
wait until there is a critical mass effect.
That's when a large number of people will shift
to VoIP and when VoIP lingo is a common part of
people's vocabulary. Since VoIP operates
seamlessly with current phone systems, it's not
a technology that jumps out at people.
Not long ago Google was an obscure web search
engine that had little consumer usage. But then
Google started to make noise, and it did so with
the help of students and web marketers who
believed it had something to offer. Now, the
word Google is used as a verb and people wonder
how they ever got along with its info finding
magic. VoIP is starting the same way but still
hasn't found a way to move into mainstream
consumer lifestyles. Rest assured though, that
VoIP companies are targeting a variety of
consumer demographic groups such as teens with
cell phones, migrating people to Europe and
North America who want to stay in close contact
with their relatives back home, and businesses
with multiple distant office locations who need
inter-office phone communications. For regular
home phone users, the value proposition they're
receiving is not as compelling. That will change
too as VoIP companies research ways to make that
home phone service more valuable to consumers,
or to make it unnecessary to keep it.
That critical mass event happens when users
believe they have a clear cost savings advantage
to make the switch from using their regular
telephone service to a VoIP phone service. Being
able to dump the home phone would certainly
provide a reduction in monthly bills, but
consumers aren't dropping their expensive land
lines, even though they may have cable
television and cell phone bills to boot. In
telecommunications, it seems consumers are
over-serviced, and a solution is needed.
Internet telephony has that potential to
eliminate some of the redundant services, but it
hasn't matured to the point where it can shape
the phone services market by itself.
Phone companies in defending themselves, put a
fair amount of effort into discussing the
possible downside of VoIP and some have even put
restrictions on VoIP transmissions to try to
thwart VoIP service providers. Old stories of
lost calls, garbled voice quality, non
functional 911 assistance, and loss of privacy
don't carry much weight anymore though. Quality
and technical issues are almost all resolved and
the services continue to improve. So, if it's
not technical issues that are preventing
widespread VoIP adoption, then what is the
problem?
Need to Drop the Land Line
Many consumers won't adopt a VoIP service until
they can drop their current phone company land
line completely. Despite the desire to do so,
many appear to be resisting eliminating their
dependence on the old lines. Most don't want to
be paying for two phone services at the same
time, yet they do. A billion people on the
planet have cell phones now, so that means there
are a lot of phone lines that aren't necessary,
or that are too expensive given the value they
offer. As long as phone companies can make
customer's land lines indispensable, or
encourage them to stay put, they know their
customers won't switch to VoIP plans. So that
leaves many consumers with more than one phone,
a home phone and a mobile phone, and it's
costing them a lot of money.
For those who don't make frequent long distance
phone calls, the cost savings from VoIP service
plans aren't compelling enough. However, when
you add the cost of the call and line features
that phone companies add onto the monthly phone
bill, the scenario changes. Call features such
as caller ID, call blocking, call waiting, and
voice mail, are free with VoIP plans. If these
aren't enough to entice consumers, VoIP
companies will certainly look to sweeten the
offer. Internet protocol communications are
improving all the time and there will be more to
offer the consumer such as; services via PDA's,
Blackberries, and IP hard phones connected to
WiFi and WiMax services.
Internet Phoning Drawbacks
When VoIP users make a call to another VoIP
user, the call is essentially free. However, not
everyone has a VoIP-based phone to receive VoIP
calls. Many only have their land line or in some
cases, a cell phone. That means the call has to
go from the Internet into the PSTN or public
switched phone system in the destination state
or country. This is where the cost of a call
shows up. Usually the cost is low for
terminating the call to the end user. If the
caller is making a long distance call however,
this nominal cost is a small sacrifice compared
to what they'll be paying on their traditional
home phone service.
High speed DSL customers must have their basic
phone service, so as long as they need the high
speed Internet connection, they might not switch
to VoIP. For cable subscribers, a land line is
not needed and VoIP works very well with Cable
Internet service. For cable subscribers, the
land-based home phone really isn't needed so the
jump to VoIP should be an easy one for cable
subscribers. If they aren't making the leap to
VoIP, it might indicate a lack of confidence in
cable networks. Most people still have trouble
comprehending that a voice telephone call can go
through the cable company, or that it will be
reliable. Cable companies have come a long way
with their technology and networks and are more
than capable of providing top notch phone
services.
With better education of telecommunications
consumers and the presentation of a solid value
proposition that offers more than a little cost
savings, VoIP will grow steadily. For those with
international calling needs, VoIP is already the
solution they're looking for. For small
businesses with lots of long distance calling,
the savings are even more pronounced. What's
needed is more consumer education. With that,
many will finally wean themselves from their
dependence on that old analog-based land line
telephone and launch into an era of cheap
digital phone calls. That day is coming soon as
the major phone companies are under increasing
pressure to raise the price of local phone
service in the face of a major shift to VoIP
transmission. Critical mass will occur when
price plus features create a force that
overcomes consumer's inertia.
About The Author
RNK Telecom is a privately held
phone company offering wholesale
and residential
telecommunications services
including
VOIP Services.
They market ReVoS, an Internet
telephony product which offers
superior
International
Calling.
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