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Reducing Audio Conferencing CostsReducing Audio Conferencing Costs

By moving from an 800, toll free, to a standard long distance number, a business can reduce its audio conferencing costs by 25+%.

Sorell Slaymaker

March 17, 2009

2 Min Read
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By moving from an 800, toll free, to a standard long distance number, a business can reduce its audio conferencing costs by 25+%.

By moving from an 800, toll free, to a standard long distance number, a business can reduce its audio conferencing costs by 25+%.With unlimited LD included in cell phone contracts and home VoIP service, and IPT at the business office, ~75% of the toll free minutes associated with audio conferencing can be eliminated. If a business pays 3 cents a minute for an 800 audio conferencing service, it maybe able to get the equivalent service without the toll free, for 1.5 cents a minute.*

If a business has an at-home employee who spends half their time on conference calls, having them on an unlimited long distance VoIP solution would save $50/month.** For employees at the office, if a business has outsourced its conferencing bridge to a 3rd party, it has two options:

--Run VoIP internally and put in a network connection to the 3rd party*** --Use LD trunks with an "on-to-on" plan to send the call to the 3rd party vs. local trunks for toll free.

Yes, a business needs to keep an 800 number for audio conferencing for its partners, customers, and employees who are offsite with less than 40/hrs month of usage, but its usage should be the exception, not the rule.

* Disclaimer: These numbers are for example only.

** Assume employee spends half their time (84 hours a month times 60 minutes/hour times 1.5 cents/minutes = $75) on a conference call and that an internal or external VoIP with unlimited LD costs $25/month.

*** Rule of thumb is that voice sent over a corporate WAN costs about 0.5 cent/minute.By moving from an 800, toll free, to a standard long distance number, a business can reduce its audio conferencing costs by 25+%.

About the Author

Sorell Slaymaker

Sorell Slaymaker has 25 years of experience designing, building, securing, and operating IP networks and the communication services that run across them. His mission is to help make communication easier and cheaper, since he believes that the more we all communicate, the better we are. Prior to joining 128 Technology as an Evangelist in 2016, Sorell was a Gartner analyst covering networking and communications. Sorell graduated from Texas A&M with a B.S. in Telecom Engineering, and went through the M.E. Telecom program at the University of Colorado.

On the weekends, Sorell enjoys being outside gardening, hiking, biking, or X-skiing. He resides in St. Paul, Minn., where he has grown to appreciate all four seasons of the year, including camping in January.