Here's a question you don't see here often -- how are you guys actually remaining competitive and getting new business? The VoIP market has evolved and I've seen prices averaging out to around $20/month per user and pretty much every major player has the capability for built in SMS, video conferencing, mobile app, etc.
I've thought about going to a low $5/month per extension rate and $20-$25 per concurrent call to stay competitive pricing wise but have found that this pricing model confuses some people. And while possible and I have done this, it's not intuitive in the slightest to limit concurrent calls on a domain basis, so this doesn't scale well from an administration standpoint.
While I love FusionPBX to death, have been an avid user for over 3 years, am currently a purple member, and have supported the project for a long time.. the GUI looks outdated compared to more commercialized solutions and is not intuitive in the slightest to a non-technical end user to the point that our customers have to rely on our helpdesk to perform virtually all maintenance and call routing changes on their system. I've worked with Mark to get the Messages app working for SMS but that leaves alot to be desired as well. I know I've posted on this before, but GS Wave is incredibly unreliable and has lost me at least 5 customers this year alone -- this is one area I will say 3CX excels: the web interface is pretty and intuitive, 3CX app works flawlessly -- all of the time, and the web client portal is a very nice end user portal for instant messaging, voicemails, call history, conferencing, etc. However, 3CX lacks SMS as of this posting, but your carrier can make up for this..
This is not a bash or a flame, but just me projecting my thoughts and positioning on these items. For very basic needs customers, I put them on our FusionPBX platform because of the multi-tenant capability. For any customers that need anything more than basic needs such as a call center, reporting, collaboration, mobility, etc.. I usually have to turn to 3CX.
About 4-5 years ago, I was pulling in new VoIP business left and right -- today I still am but it has slowed down and I am seeing alot more customer turnover due to the limitations I've mentioned above in conjunction with the VoIP market starting to become over saturated. My main source of new VoIP business is our Managed IT Services customers as just another service we can offer them and provide them a central point of contact for both IT services and telecom services, however, as much as I hate to admit this.. I have found myself deploying 3CX more and more lately due to the pain points that I've listed above.
What is everyone's opinion on this? Are you still pulling in good business? What are your strategies for doing so to set you apart from everyone else out there, especially the main players (Ring Central, Nextiva, Vonage, Ooma, etc.)
I've thought about going to a low $5/month per extension rate and $20-$25 per concurrent call to stay competitive pricing wise but have found that this pricing model confuses some people. And while possible and I have done this, it's not intuitive in the slightest to limit concurrent calls on a domain basis, so this doesn't scale well from an administration standpoint.
While I love FusionPBX to death, have been an avid user for over 3 years, am currently a purple member, and have supported the project for a long time.. the GUI looks outdated compared to more commercialized solutions and is not intuitive in the slightest to a non-technical end user to the point that our customers have to rely on our helpdesk to perform virtually all maintenance and call routing changes on their system. I've worked with Mark to get the Messages app working for SMS but that leaves alot to be desired as well. I know I've posted on this before, but GS Wave is incredibly unreliable and has lost me at least 5 customers this year alone -- this is one area I will say 3CX excels: the web interface is pretty and intuitive, 3CX app works flawlessly -- all of the time, and the web client portal is a very nice end user portal for instant messaging, voicemails, call history, conferencing, etc. However, 3CX lacks SMS as of this posting, but your carrier can make up for this..
This is not a bash or a flame, but just me projecting my thoughts and positioning on these items. For very basic needs customers, I put them on our FusionPBX platform because of the multi-tenant capability. For any customers that need anything more than basic needs such as a call center, reporting, collaboration, mobility, etc.. I usually have to turn to 3CX.
About 4-5 years ago, I was pulling in new VoIP business left and right -- today I still am but it has slowed down and I am seeing alot more customer turnover due to the limitations I've mentioned above in conjunction with the VoIP market starting to become over saturated. My main source of new VoIP business is our Managed IT Services customers as just another service we can offer them and provide them a central point of contact for both IT services and telecom services, however, as much as I hate to admit this.. I have found myself deploying 3CX more and more lately due to the pain points that I've listed above.
What is everyone's opinion on this? Are you still pulling in good business? What are your strategies for doing so to set you apart from everyone else out there, especially the main players (Ring Central, Nextiva, Vonage, Ooma, etc.)
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