I work for a business phone provider, so obvious bias there…but we always encourage a dedicated business number, and have found that it’s less about VoIP vs landline and more about the ease of separation and routing. That said, features like calls routed to mobile phones, auto-attendants, and voicemail or callbacks instead of constant live answering tend to function a lot more cleanly on VoIP systems.
Setups that hold up best usually prioritize flexibility over hardware. Ringing multiple devices, limiting interruptions during focus time, and having visibility into missed calls matters more than the specific underlying tech.
At Matasano --- and this is back to like 2005 --- we just used an online telephony provider that routed calls to our mobile phones. I'd probably still just do that today.
Joel_VirtualPBX|2 months ago
Setups that hold up best usually prioritize flexibility over hardware. Ringing multiple devices, limiting interruptions during focus time, and having visibility into missed calls matters more than the specific underlying tech.
If it helps, here’s a neutral comparison of common small business phone setups and their tradeoffs: https://www.virtualpbx.com/blog/general-telephony/top-10-sma...
tptacek|2 months ago
gumboshoes|2 months ago
Amir6|2 months ago
duckkg5|2 months ago
sejje|2 months ago
My cell for real business, like my distributors. Mostly we text.
Nothing sucks about it. People call, we answer.
toomuchtodo|2 months ago
(no affiliation besides being a customer)