October 9, 2007 3:54 PM PDT

RingCentral manages your calls, saves money with VoIP

by Josh Lowensohn
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While GrandCentral may have been stealing headlines lately, there's another suffix-sharing phone call management service called RingCentral that can make small businesses look and function like larger ones with some pretty neat telephonic tomfoolery. The service has been around since early 2004, and today is introducing a slew of VoIP plans called DigitalLine that give users the option to use VoIP instead of, or on top of their existing landlines.

So what can you do with RingCentral? Small business owners will love it, since you can set up a ridiculously extensive set of rules to handle incoming calls, or reroute them on the fly with a virtual phone call manager called SoftPhone. The idea is to take a single or multiline setup and spread it out intelligently, while putting all the options online for you to manage and tweak while away from your office.

Make and control calls on your desktop, be they analog or VoIP.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Like GrandCentral, you can set up calls to be routed to different phones or line extensions, there are also handy business-centric settings to tweak the response people get when they call at off-business hours. For fans of GrandCentral's multiphone ring system, RingCentral has also gone the extra step of letting you add three-digit passwords to an incoming phone call to keep unintended pickups from happening. This feature actually stemmed out of users wanting to keep their children from answering a business phone call when they had forgotten to turn off the home forwarding options off, or couldn't get to their own phone in time.

The new VoIP implementation is fairly straightforward. All incoming calls can be set to be received via VoIP, letting you receive and manage phone calls while away from your landline. You can also get various minute packages to use VoIP to make outgoing calls, including an all-you-can-eat plan of outgoing VoIP for around $25/month. In contrast to consumer VoIP services like Vonage, Skype, or Comcast's DigitalVoice, RingCentral isn't aiming at cheap outgoing long distance providers, as much as the multi-line business crowd who's looking for a way to handle several lines without the hardware or staffing.

For a shot of the call log interface, click the read more link below.

Listen to voice mails in your browser, and check out your call logs. If you want to call anyone back, you can now do so right from your computer with the DigitalLine VoIP service.

(Credit: CNET Networks)
Josh Lowensohn writes for Webware.com, CNET's blog about Web applications and services. E-mail Josh, or follow him on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/Josh.
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by kriztupher October 18, 2009 9:44 PM PDT
I never write reviews about my experiences with these types of companies, but Ringcentral is actually trying to scam people into thinking they have support, and making people think that they can easily cancel their accounts. I wouldn?t feel right about keep this to myself. I wanted to cancel my account with these guys just because I no longer needed the service. Not only could I not get through to anyone using any communication medium, but they have 4 or 5 different ways of fooling their customers into thinking it?s easy to cancel your account with them. They make you think there is 24/7 support, but you will not get through to someone by calling. It even tells you while you?re on hold that you can press 9 to leave a voicemail. Pressing 9 does nothing. I tried it from 3 different phones. Try it yourself... Call (888) 898-4591, press 4, then when instructed to, press 9 to leave a VM. Nothing! So then I tried accessing their contact link after logging into their site in hopes that there was some other way to get in touch with them. It asked me to login again after clicking on ?contact us?, but of course my login and password didn?t work for this part of the site. I successfully reset my password a few times, and tried logging into the main site a few times, but the same problem continued to present itself. I couldn?t access the contact us page. Now i?ll admit that they could be neglecting their site, and IVR in this one area and all of this is a coincidence, but seriously this is unacceptable no matter how you spin it. My next step is to call sales, and try and get a manager on the line in hopes of canceling that way. After that, I guess i?ll need to go to my credit card company. This sucks...
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