Should your MSP be selling VoIP services?

Should Your MSP be Selling VoIP services?

Should Your MSP be Selling VoIP services? image

In my last blog post, I looked at the question of whether your MSP should be selling telecoms Services such as Blue button with telephone symbol VOIPmobile phone handsets and contracts, analogue lines and mobile broadband. The answer to that question was… maybe, but probably not. Go and read the article for the pros and cons!

As promised, let’s now take a look at Voice-over-IP services (VoIP) and whether as an MSP you should be adding these services to your portfolio of client offerings.

As with adding any service to your portfolio, the first question to ask yourself is “Will I spreading myself too thin?” Whilst VoIP is based over traditional networks, switches and routers familiar to most IT solution providers, it’s still an acquired skill to implement a successful VoIP system.

Unlike other IT systems where an outage is tolerated and almost expected, in contrast end users have been educated to expect to pick up a telephone handset and for it to work 100% of the time. Any support ticket you receive for a VoIP handset issue needs to be resolved very quickly indeed.

VoIP can therefore be a chore to support and troubleshoot, but there’s a school of thought (which includes myself) that says even if you don’t offer VoIP services – your client will probably end up acquiring a VoIP system at some point which you will end up supporting.

So you’ve got a straight choice – either get skilled at installing and supporting VoIP yourself, or create a Strategic Alliance partnership with a trusted partner company who specialises in it.

The third option is a mixture of the two. When I owned an MSP, we typically sold VoIP systems with ten handsets or fewer – specifically because the complexity was low and the expectations of the client were not unreasonable. Any system above ten handsets and we’d often partner with a specialised Telecoms business who could deliver the service.

You may also be asking if VoIP solutions are even still relevant. While there are all kinds of telephony and conference solutions available these days, a dedicated telephone number answered by a real person is still highly valued – many companies believe it makes them seem more credible, and it’s good just to pick up the phone to ask a question.

Eat Your Own Dog Food

In terms of delivering VoIP services, there’s a phrase I’m fond of – “Eat Your Own Dog Food”. Simply put, if you’re going to be delivering a service or technology to a client, make sure you use it yourself in-house. Once you’ve researched the VoIP system you’re going to install for your clients, deploy it to your own office. The advantages are that you become familiar with the technology and service, its benefits and limitations, and you can set your clients’ expectations accordingly – and early, which is especially important for VoIP.

Understanding Why the Client Wants VoIP

From your perspective, you need to understand why the client is interested in a VoIP solution. Alarm bells should be ringing if the reason the client is interested in VoIP purely based on reducing costs. VoIP systems typically have a lower up-front cost and cheaper on-going costs than their old Plain Old Telephone System (POTS) predecessors – but many clients assume VoIP equals free.

That’s definitely not the case, as whilst call costs can be cheaper, you still need reliable broadband (and often a dedicated broadband line for VoIP alone) and VoIP handsets cost money too. Make sure you can lay this all out for them clearly.

It’s important to help educate the client to the trade offs involved with a VoIP system vs. a traditional POTs system too. Don’t over-promise. VoIP is cheaper, but will experience downtime at some point – whether that’s due to broadband failure or another issue.

Many clients are happy to factor this in based on the additional flexibility and feature set VoIP offers, such as site to site calls, call forwarding and call recording, but be sure to have this conversation up front with a client, so they don’t have any nasty surprises.

Location, Location, Location

VOIP calls: two white figures using phones connected through a globeLocation is also hugely important to VoIP. If your client is located in a broadband dark-spot. Don’t automatically assume that just because they’re in a central location they’ll have good broadband as many industrial parks and city centre locations have poor broadband.

In that case, VoIP may not be a cost-effective option for your client. Always do a site survey for broadband beforehand and be prepared to walk away from a deal if broadband is poor.

If you don’t, you’ll be setting yourself up for lots of headaches supporting a VoIP system with poor broadband. You want to make things as easy as possible for both you and your client.

After all this, if the client decides VoIP is for them – offer them a trial of the service. Plug a handset or two in on-site and let the client use it in anger for a month or more. You’ll soon know whether they’re a good fit for VoIP or not based on how they react to using the handset.

When it comes to deployment, planning is everything. Do an audit of the existing telephone numbers and extensions in use, and plan well in advance for migration of DDIs and other numbers. This is where a good VoIP service provider can make your life easy, instead of giving an incredibly frustrating experience.

Finding a VoIP Provider

Finding a VoIP service provider is key to your success. A good partner will offer you training, help you standardise your installation for multiple successful deployments, and train you and your staff with best practice advice – as well as offering timely technical support as needed.

It’s typically best to work with a VoIP provider local to your region – so if you’re UK based, don’t work with a US provider, and visa versa. Do your research – ask around for your peers’ opinions and experiences of VoIP providers. There are an awful lot out there, but not all VoIP providers are the same.

Conclusion

In conclusion, VoIP can be a great addition to your service portfolio – but only if you research and understand the market before you enter it. Failure to do so will see you bemoaning VoIP as an unprofitable service and a drain on your service desk.

But done well, VoIP services adds value to your MSP business by allowing you to offer a very useful service to your clients, increasing your “stickiness” with them and giving them another reason to work with you. It’s also an additional revenue stream; just don’t expect to get rich from VoIP alone – margins are typically thin – so don’t give up the IT business just yet!

The original version of this post was inspired by Craig Sharp of Abussi, who provide IT and VoIP support. Check them out here.

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RICHARD TUBB

Richard Tubb is one of the best-known experts within the global IT Managed Service Provider (MSP) community. He launched and sold his own MSP business before creating a leading MSP media and consultancy practice. Richard helps IT business owner’s take back control by freeing up their time and building a business that can run without them. He’s the author of the book “The IT Business Owner’s Survival Guide” and writer of the award-winning blog www.tubblog.co.uk

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Comments

7 thoughts on Should Your MSP be Selling VoIP services?

CRAIG SHARP

9TH FEBRUARY 2012 17:15:14

Richard, excellent Blog and it really shows that VoIP is valuable, worthwhile but needs to be carefully thought through. I think you take all the +'s and -'ves and put a strong argument together. Excellent

RICHARD TUBB

9TH FEBRUARY 2012 17:19:09

Craig - thanks for the kind words, and as I alluded to in the blog, your presentation at AMITPRO recently was the inspiration for this. Even a VoIP veteran like myself learned a whole lot from your presentation! You're clearly an expert in this field.

CRAIG SHARP

14TH MAY 2012 15:37:52

While I consider this, I think it's also worth noting that VoIP is an important part of the valuable and time saving solution of Unified Communications (http://j.mp/zxAILx). Microsoft Lync is a wonderful tool in this regard, but we are getting closer to the phone and PC being a single unit. Lets not forget, we have it on an iPhone / Android Phone (just smaller) so why not a PC ?

RICHARD TUBB

14TH MAY 2012 16:23:04

Microsoft Lync is an interesting one. MS are trying to make sure Lync is available on all platforms - iPhone, Android, Laptop, Desktop, Tablet. With the acquisition of Skype by Microsoft, who'd bet against a Lync client for Xbox in the near future?

PAUL

8TH MAY 2013 09:35:09

Agree 100% with the blog, spot on! very much inline with my experience of adopting VOIP phone systems to use internally and sell to our clients. I'm using Cisco UC3xx/5xx systems, and think they are reasonable...not perfect though. What are other IT companies using that are easy to implement and support? I've looked at 3CX but wasn't keen on it being run on a PC/server. I just don't trust PCs for business critical equipment :)

RICHARD TUBB

13TH MAY 2013 09:42:37

Paul - thanks for the feedback! I see a lot of Cisco UC systems out there in the SMB space. Many 3CX systems too. More rarely I see Asterix. I'd be equally interested to hear what other MSP's are using/selling though.

VOIP PHONES UK

12TH FEBRUARY 2021 07:53:32

I really like this article. It really shows how VoIP service is valuable for us. We need to be very careful while choosing the services. Thank you very much for wonderful article and keep posting .

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