VoIP - Sometimes Not An Easy Choice
Previously I wrote that VoIP was a good choice. If naked DSL or
DSL without phone service is not an option for you, then VoIP
can still be a good choice for your second or even third phone
line. It sure comes in handy for your teenage children not to
mention a home office. I recently sold service to a gentleman
who wanted VoIP specifically for the ability to have a virtual
number. His daughter recently went off to college in another
state. He purchased VoIP service and signed up for a virtual
number. He got a virtual number in the same area code that his
daughter was in. This allows his daughter to call him at local
charges vs. the long distance charges she would normally have to
pay. Kudos' to him for making his decision. Just another great
benefit VoIP has to offer.
This weekend I was speaking with a friend of mine who recently
purchased a home computer. He knew about my business and wanted
to know his options for internet access. He also knows that I'm
not just a big fan of VoIP but that I myself use it. His primary
objective was internet access, secondary objective was VoIP.
Here's where the choices, for him, weren't so straightforward.
First off, his current phone provider is the local cable
company. He doesn't use cable TV, rather he uses satellite TV.
This current scenario meets his needs. He's a huge sports fan
and not about to give up his satellite TV because of the sports
packages. Do you know anyone else in this type of situation? I
told him that 'normal' DSL is out of the question. Our local
RBOC won't allow DSL access without phone service. What about
naked DSL? Yes, my company has recently signed up a couple
providers offering naked DSL, but the price is a bit higher.
About the same as cable internet access would cost when you
don't have cable TV service. In both cases, naked DSL and cable
access, the monthly fee was more than he's willing to pay.
Well then, that was our dilemma. His existing setup won't allow
for either DSL or Cable without him spending more than he wants
per month. A switch to cable TV service with cable broadband
access won't work for him either. He just doesn't want to give
up the satellite TV sports package. So what to do?
His options, as it were, are limited. I asked about his phone
habits. How many local and long distance minutes do him and his
family use? His child is fairly young and his wife's family
lives in the area, so long distance minutes don't come into the
picture. That leaves local calling. I have a bundled service I
could offer him, but guess what, YEP, the RBOC 'will' allow a
competitor to offer local service BUT the RBOC will 'not' allow
that competitor to offer DSL.
He was trying to avoid the local RBOC, which is why he switched
to cable phone service a few years back. Now, although he does
have choices, the only thing to meet his budget is to cancel
cable phone service and go back with the RBOC. Once phone
service is active, then I can get him DSL access. DSL access
from the local RBOC's is really dropping in price so he can get
his first 6 months at a very reasonable price. Even after that
6-month period, the rate is reasonable as well. This solves his
primary objective to get high-speed internet access but doesn't
solve his secondary objective to get VoIP. He has no use for a
second phone line so that's not an option.
Since the FCC has mandated that RBOC's need to offer naked DSL
in roughly 3 years time, that's actually going to work for him.
After that 3-year timeframe his young child will be in high
school. He'll have more choices in just a few years. So, for
this case, he doesn't get everything he wants at the budget he
can afford. Rather he solves his primary objective of internet
access for now and will go for VoIP once the prices of naked DSL
come down.
Although this is doable, it's really a shame. It may be rare and
it was the first time I've personally run across this type of
situation. Phone from cable, TV from satellite works great for
him, but because the phone companies and cable companies don't
play well, he looses. I will show him how to make his long
distance calls from his computer, but for VoIP as a primary
phone service, he'll need to wait. Sometimes the decision to use
VoIP is not such an easy choice. (For now)