Already Using VoIP?
Give Productivity a Boost by Going
Wireless
If you're serious about
lowering business expenses and increasing efficiency, you may already be
among the growing number of SMBs using Voice over IP (VoIP) technology
to offset telecommunications expenses.
But did you know that by
blending VoIP technology with your existing wireless LAN, you can make
another leap in productivity -- through a new technology called wireless
VoIP?
The idea may not be so
strange.
In recent months, more and
more businesses with 10- to 50-person networks are realizing Voice over
Wi-Fi technology is within their grasp. By using it, these SMBs are
leveraging the power of converged wireless communications to transport
telephone traffic to and from mobile users.
How It Works
If you have an existing wireless LAN, that network already lets
employees stay connected to the network as they move from place to place
while on campus -- between conference rooms, during lunch or at
meetings. This helps them boost productivity since their work can be
accomplished virtually anywhere.
By adding VoIP technology
to your existing wireless LAN -- in the form of 802.11-enabled Wi-Fi
phones -- you can transmit voice communications over your wireless
infrastructure and tap into newfound benefits.
With wireless VoIP,
employees can still access e-mail while in a conference room or
cafeteria -- but now, they can also pick up calls from their phone
extensions through their wireless phones. This decreases the frustration
of phone tag, the wasted time checking voice mail, and the risk of
missing important calls from customers. Plus, it delivers increased
communication, accessibility and productivity, thus sharpening your
company's competitive edge.
By mixing telephone traffic
with WLAN data, your company not only nets better employee mobility, it
can lower network costs. After all, supporting a single infrastructure
that handles both data and voice traffic is generally simpler and less
expensive than two separate ones.
Wireless VoIP in Action
Say you're a manufacturing company whose single building houses its
manufacturing, warehouse and corporate offices. You may use a wireless
LAN to provide wireless data collection in inventory and
shipping/receiving functions -- but you also use two-way radios to
enable communications between supervisors and warehouse employees
scattered throughout the building.
By using Wi-Fi phones
designed to interface with the WLAN, you can now avoid the need for
two-way radios and their associated operational management functions.
Instead, everyone's office becomes virtual, with each person's extension
ringing to a personal handset that’s with them wherever they go.
Some manufacturers also
provide wireless phones that switch easily between the company network
and a cellular network to give users even more freedom to roam off
campus.
The Makings of a
Wireless VoIP Solution
To create a wireless VoIP
network, you'll need four components:
- A basic IP network
- A WLAN backbone,
consisting of access points and a distribution system
- Telephone handsets
equipped with 802.11 wireless technology
- A gateway or access
point enhanced to handle the special bandwidth control requirements
of voice traffic
A Win-win for
Mobility-centric Verticals
Employee accessibility and productivity are the main drivers behind
wireless VoIP technology's surge in popularity. After all, not missing
phone calls or waiting for callbacks can greatly increase productivity,
and give employees the freedom to stray from their desks without losing
access to their phones.
While these benefits can
help companies in virtually any industry, wireless VoIP holds special
appeal for companies with diversified environments and in
mobility-centric verticals, such as healthcare, retail, manufacturing,
education, hospitality and transportation. More specifically, this
solution is ideal in any location where:
- Employees may not have
permanent desks.
- It's impractical or
expensive to install wired desksets.
- There are too many
people for wireless phones.
- People often wander
beyond a wireless phone's range.
- Cell phones aren't
allowed or service can't reach.
Vertical markets like these
can easily cost-justify the technology, because they can tie ROI to the
resulting reduced head count, increased sales and other tangibles.
If you're sold on
maximizing your business productivity, wireless VoIP could be the right
solution for you. Call us today to discuss your individual needs and
schedule a network assessment.