Speaking of features—
Not sure what features you should prioritize looking for in a VoIP phone system? No worries, we’ve put together a list of essentials you can use as a checklist when shopping for a business telephony solution.
Here are the top features to look into when evaluating vendors:
- Automated attendant
- Call forwarding
- Call queues
- Advanced voicemail
- Call recording
- Caller ID and blocking
Let’s dive a little bit deeper into these.
The automated attendant (better known as “auto attendant”), which we’ve brought up more than a few times before, is basically a digital receptionist that’s meant to answer calls made to your business.
The great thing about having this is that it ensures customers and even business partners won’t have to endure persistent ringing even outside of office hours. You can simply have this feature pick up the call after a ring or two and assist the caller by providing information and routing options (example: forward to a different line during lunch or voicemail past closing time) via interactive menus.
What’s more, you can even customize callers’ experiences through branded music on hold and recorded announcements. In fact, some providers offer multi-level auto attendant capabilities that can be programmed to provide self-service options.
Call forwarding lets you intelligently redirect incoming calls to relevant people, teams, and departments. Because this technology tends to be automated, busy organizations can use this to set up custom rules for a range of different extensions and scenarios. So if, for example, you’re out for lunch, you can have the call routed to your mobile phone, to a co-worker’s phone, or to a voicemail inbox.
Call forwarding capabilities in general often work in conjunction with the auto attendant (the auto attendant answers the calls, while call forwarding sends the calls to the right places). When deployed as part of a VoIP phone system, you can even have it so calls are sent to your home’s landline phone or any similar device.
Many business communications solutions providers offer this feature in conjunction with call transfer capabilities, which let users manually send live calls to another phone line as needed. This is especially useful if the caller needs information that can only be provided by another person or team.
Another really useful feature to look out for is the ability to set up call queues. This places incoming calls on a waitlist if the person or department they need to speak to is on a live call and can’t pick up a new call yet.
This is especially useful for organizations that have an inbound call center. Many customers prefer being placed in a queue over being sent to voicemail or getting told via a pre-recorded message to use a different means of contacting the company(outside of the business phone number). So this translates to better experiences which, in turn, help translate to brand loyalty.
While voicemail is generally familiar to most of us—it’s a technology that lets callers leave voice messages, which can be accessed by the person they’re calling at a later date—voice over IP for business made it possible for this to be taken to the next level.
Advanced voicemail functionality comes in different forms. Sometimes, it’s as simple as getting an email notification (along with a copy of the recording) for each message left for you. Other times, it involves visual voicemail, which lets you view a list of voice messages you’ve received so you can choose which ones to listen to first.
8x8 has some really great virtual voicemail functionality, which doesn’t just include visual voicemail and notifications but transcriptions too.
The best VoIP phone systems should offer call recording options that allow you to automatically record phone calls made on your VoIP system. This is ideal not just for call centers that need a record of customer-agent interactions for coaching purposes, but for other types of interactions like project meetings attendees may want to review.
Other use cases in the context of contact centers include dispute resolutions, order tracking, and fact-checking (for ensuring regulatory compliance).
Caller ID is most commonly recognized as a feature that lets a person know who’s calling them. In the context of businesses, this has two main functions—controlling the identity each person presents when they use their professional phone numbers to make calls and managing incoming calls more effectively.
The second use case we just mentioned is the reason why caller ID capabilities are often marketed in conjunction with call blocking features. Call blocking ensures you can stop calls from spam numbers from going through to your lines, meaning your time won ’t be wasted.