VoIP setup guide for Australian businesses
A VoIP handset is only half the equation. To make and receive calls, it needs to connect to a provider's network. This takes two minutes to sort out, and getting it right the first time saves you a support call later.
The basics
A VoIP provider is the company that actually carries your calls, over the internet rather than a traditional phone line. Your new handset is the device on your desk; the provider is the service running behind it, similar to how a SIM card is what makes a mobile phone actually work.
Most Australian businesses moving to VoIP are doing it because the NBN has phased out traditional copper phone lines, or because their current setup is costing more than it should for the features they get.
The good news is that setting this up is usually quick. Most providers can have a business taking calls within a day or two of signing up, and the phone itself takes only a few minutes to register once the account is active.
Why it matters
A few reasons businesses make the switch:
How to choose
Not all providers are the same, and the right fit depends on a few things specific to your business:
This is exactly the kind of thing that's hard to judge from a website. It's also why we don't just point you at a generic list of providers and leave you to it.
Get a recommendation
Tell us a bit about your business and we'll point you to the right VoIP provider. Free, no obligation, no sales pressure.