After achieving seven straight years of profit,
Virtual PBX has recorded another successful year in 2008. According to the company, this is due to more small and mid-size businesses choose Virtual PBX’s (
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As the small and medium sized businesses realize the inherent benefits of PBX service, they are increasingly adopting this new technology. But the impeding economic situation and the ever increasing cost of deploying such technology is stopping many small and medium sized companies to go for PBX service.
Offering its basic system at just $9.99 a month, Virtual PBX claims to bring the affordability factor into the PBX domain. The company also claims that its service gets rid of the need for expensive hardware and software. As a result, the company has recorded more than triple the number of new customer signups in 2008, compared to the same period a year ago. The company has recorded a new high in the number of customers purchasing its service each month from August 2008 through January 2009.
“Businesses know they need professional communications to keep customers happy and attract prospects, but in this current economic slump, this service becomes even more critical,” said Paul Hammond, CEO of Virtual PBX. “Our hosted PBX service allows cash-strapped small and mid-size businesses to deliver a professional and responsive phone experience with virtually no upfront capital cost and low ongoing expense.”
Virtual PBX offers many advantages in its service such as Virtual PBX Configuration Wizard, Virtual PBX Google (
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Recently,
Nextiva, a provider of communication services for small- and medium-sized businesses (SMBs),
helped thousands of companies run professional phones systems affordably with its suite of virtual PBX solutions. With just a few clicks, users can switch extensions, forward calls, and set up voicemail. Moreover, if a business changes offices, there is no PBX equipment to move, no phone numbers to change and no downtime for the network.
Raju Shanbhag is a contributing editor for TMCnet. To read more of Raju’s articles, please visit his columnist page.Edited by
Tim Gray