UPS Batteries: A Business Telephone System Life Line

One sure way to avoid damage to a business telephone system is to deploy UPS batteries. An uninterruptible power supply, or UPS, is a battery that backs up the primary power source for a telephone system in the event of a service interruption or failure. Depending on the size and capacity of the UPS device, it may also “condition” the flow of current to a system to provide a clean, stable supply of electricity, thereby eliminating drops or surges in power that can damage system components. For business telephone systems, two types of UPS batteries typically are used: (1) line-interactive batteries, and (2) double conversion batteries. Both are considerably more robust than stand-by batteries that often are used to provide back-up power for individual desk top computers. Line-interactive batteries are designed to tolerate continuous under-voltage brownouts and over-voltage surges without consuming the reserve battery power, while double conversion UPS systems, providing the same protections, are appropriate for use on larger business telephone systems. The reliable operation of a telephone system is dependent upon a steady, uninterrupted supply of electrical power. Since business telephone systems have become increasingly computer-based, they have become even more vulnerable to power surges and outages. Telephone systems now contain many components that are sensitive to changes in power flowing to them, including integrated circuit boards, silicon chips and high performance cables, and it is vital to insulate them from dips and spikes in electric current. With companies so dependent on telephone communication for the profitable conduct of business, downtime caused by damage to a system can have substantial costs due to lost sales and missed...

Cutover of Business Telephone Service: Plan, Execute and Test

You’ve selected a new telephone carrier, confident that the services offered meet the needs of your business, and a date has been set to make the cutover. Now the clock is ticking. The cutover of business telephone service to a new carrier is a major step for any company, no matter its size, and therefore requires a solid game plan. The ideal is that the transition from one carrier to another be as seamless as possible, with no surprises and no disruption of service. But the ideal is not always the reality, so a good plan must contemplate worst case possibilities in order to prepare for them. Moving your telephone numbers (“porting” them) from one carrier to another is permitted so long as your business remains in the same geographic area. In the jargon of the trade, this is referred to as local number portability, or LNP. Regardless of your current phone service carrier, the FCC requires that all land-line service providers allow customers to port their numbers to a new service provider, which is done by way of a location routing number (LRN). By removing the inconvenience of having to change telephone numbers when signing on with a new carrier, you will find that there is greater competition for business among local service providers. When a customer moves its local service to a new carrier, a new LRN is assigned to the telephone numbers being ported. Each local exchange, long distance or wireless carrier needs to know what that new LRN is in order to route calls correctly, accomplished though use of Local Service Management System (LSMS) databases...

Speech Privacy and Sound Masking in a Business Environment

You’re on the phone with your banker discussing a preliminary plan to acquire a competitor, a matter of utmost confidentiality and though you’ve closed your door, staff members linger outside of your office discussing last night’s ball game. How do you insure that your conversation is not overheard and that word of your plan is not leaked to the public? Shooing the staff members away with a broom may be one answer. A speech privacy system is another and more elegant answer. When you finish the phone call, you step out of your office, walk across the floor and are struck by the level of noise from multiple telephone conversations taking place in cubicles, the clacking of copier machines, the hum of printers, and you wonder how work gets done with all of those distractions. You rightfully become concerned about employee productivity, particularly as you contemplate that acquisition. There must be a way to mask all of that sound, you think. And you’re right. Sound masking in a business environment has become an effective tool to improve worker productivity, which leads to higher profits. Over the years, business management has responded to ever-rising operating and occupancy costs by maximizing the use of existing space and a result of this has been that more employees are being squeezed into those existing spaces. Further, there has been a trend to fewer and smaller private offices and more worker cubicles with lower panels to reduce the costs of lighting, heating and air conditioning. One result of these changes has been a loss of speech privacy; another has been the increase in distractive...

Call Accounting Systems: Monitor Your Business Telephone Activity

You’re looking over last month’s profit and loss statement for the business and when you come upon the line item for telephone expenses you wonder if there’s room for some cost savings. You begin to ask yourself: How many wasted calls are being made every day? Do we allocate the proper costs by department? Are we being billed correctly by our carrier? Are we charging our clients properly? You wish you had a tool to come up with the answers. Well, there is a tool and its name is “Call Accounting”. All major telephone equipment vendors offer call accounting software as an added feature to their systems, and no matter the size of your operation there is an application available that will give you the information to monitor telephone usage and to measure worker productivity. Call accounting systems capture and record telephone usage and produce useful management reports. Initially, such software was developed as a tool to allocate costs between departments or profit centers within large enterprises. While these early versions of call accounting software did not concern themselves with measuring productivity, the effectiveness of sales staffs or with identifying misuse or fraud, new applications perform these and many other functions. In today’s workplace, call accounting systems can be used to audit telephone service invoices and wireless and long distance charges. System outages are easily identified for possible credits from carriers. Toll calls can be tracked as well as any unusual or abusive calling patterns of employees. These systems can assist in measuring the effectiveness of customer service call centers and help management determine the appropriate head count to...

IP Telephone Paging Systems

NEC UT880 IP Phone with Touchscreen & Speaker Telephone paging systems have come a long way both in terms of sound quality and the variety of ancillary equipment that expand and enhance their use. You don’t have to settle for blast, blare and static or sounding like you’re 20,000 leagues under the sea when using a paging system. Step into the realm of internet protocol (IP) paging, with its broad menu of advanced features and functions. IP paging is suitable for a wide range of businesses, from office buildings and medical suites to manufacturing plants, and from hospitals and schools to automobile dealerships. No matter the venue, the results are always the same: improved productivity and better customer service, which translate to increased profits. Network-based IP paging is more easily installed than legacy wired analog systems and it eliminates the need for and the cost of having separate voice and data networks, since IP paging is deployed by using a company’s existing data and telephony infrastructure. Unlike traditional 70 volt systems that require the use of special shielded wiring to prevent interference and noise from being picked up by a paging system, IP amplified speakers are connected using standard low-voltage telephone and data cabling. There are several ways to connect a paging system to a telephone system. Most telephone systems have external built-in paging ports, while others require a converter for an analog trunk, an analog station or a digital station interface. Paging system amplifiers are used to connect a telephone system to overhead paging speakers and horns. Many paging systems can also support talkback features and ambient background...
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