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Why Upgrading from Analog to VoIP Can Cut Costs for Your Hotel

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Manage episode 519792275 series 3550875
Content provided by Amp. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Amp or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

The irony. Within 5 minutes of checking in, most hotel guests will sit down and plug the WiFi password into their cell. All just feet from a house phone they'll never touch.

Yet hotels are legally required to make sure their guests can access emergency services. Which usually means placing that phone in every room. And with that phone comes support and infrastructure. Which ends up creating a pretty big bill for a service that's virtually unused.

But it doesn't have to. Voistay communications experts explain how.

Once a cash cow, aging phone systems may be costing many hotels $100,000 or more each year, according to a recent report from Hospitality Financial and Technology Professionals, an international nonprofit association. Annual maintenance and line fees for an analog or legacy PBX system cost between $6,000 and $16,000 for an average 200-room hotel.

Say guests actually do pick up the phone - to request towels or another service that doesn't generate revenue. Answering these calls takes employees away from valuable tasks. These labor costs can rack up $40,000 to $80,000 annually, according to HFTP.

But your hotel doesn't have to stay in the cycle of unpredictable costs and aging equipment repairs. Switching over to a voice-over-IP system can save hotels both infrastructure and labor costs. To switch while avoiding minimal disruption during the upcoming holiday busy season, Voistay representatives recommend:

Choose a system that integrates your legacy equipment into its modern infrastructure to preserve your hardware and avoid replacement costs

Ensure the system is room specific, to ensure compliance with E911, Kari's Law, and Ray Baum's Act

Battery backup is a necessity to maintains functionality during power outage

Integrated AI functions can solve simple requests and reserve human help for more complicated issues

Legacy system expenses can mount quietly during busy seasons. Then, the high volume often strains underused systems or leads to unexpected equipment failures. Additionally, the higher volume of front desk calls creates a hidden increase in labor costs.

Stop throwing good money after bad. Replace obsolete analog and PBX systems with a cost-effective, streamlined VoIP system before the holiday rush.

For more information, visit the link in the description Voistay City: Wilmington Address: 4173 Website: https://voistay.com/

  continue reading

2001 episodes

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iconShare
 
Manage episode 519792275 series 3550875
Content provided by Amp. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Amp or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

The irony. Within 5 minutes of checking in, most hotel guests will sit down and plug the WiFi password into their cell. All just feet from a house phone they'll never touch.

Yet hotels are legally required to make sure their guests can access emergency services. Which usually means placing that phone in every room. And with that phone comes support and infrastructure. Which ends up creating a pretty big bill for a service that's virtually unused.

But it doesn't have to. Voistay communications experts explain how.

Once a cash cow, aging phone systems may be costing many hotels $100,000 or more each year, according to a recent report from Hospitality Financial and Technology Professionals, an international nonprofit association. Annual maintenance and line fees for an analog or legacy PBX system cost between $6,000 and $16,000 for an average 200-room hotel.

Say guests actually do pick up the phone - to request towels or another service that doesn't generate revenue. Answering these calls takes employees away from valuable tasks. These labor costs can rack up $40,000 to $80,000 annually, according to HFTP.

But your hotel doesn't have to stay in the cycle of unpredictable costs and aging equipment repairs. Switching over to a voice-over-IP system can save hotels both infrastructure and labor costs. To switch while avoiding minimal disruption during the upcoming holiday busy season, Voistay representatives recommend:

Choose a system that integrates your legacy equipment into its modern infrastructure to preserve your hardware and avoid replacement costs

Ensure the system is room specific, to ensure compliance with E911, Kari's Law, and Ray Baum's Act

Battery backup is a necessity to maintains functionality during power outage

Integrated AI functions can solve simple requests and reserve human help for more complicated issues

Legacy system expenses can mount quietly during busy seasons. Then, the high volume often strains underused systems or leads to unexpected equipment failures. Additionally, the higher volume of front desk calls creates a hidden increase in labor costs.

Stop throwing good money after bad. Replace obsolete analog and PBX systems with a cost-effective, streamlined VoIP system before the holiday rush.

For more information, visit the link in the description Voistay City: Wilmington Address: 4173 Website: https://voistay.com/

  continue reading

2001 episodes

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