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Long
Distance FAQ's
AT&T, MCI, WORLDCOM, FRONTIER, EXCEL- IS THERE REALLY A DIFFERENCE?
Quite simply, for the vast majority of
clients there isn't a difference. These days there's little
difference in quality among the major vendors (AT&T, MCI,
Sprint). Low price is a good criterion (not the only) for choosing
a long distance carrier. Due to the incestuous relationship
between carriers, it isn't unusual to have your call travel
through several competitors lines before landing at its
destination. The call leaves your business on copper wire via your
local Bell company, is transferred to the fiber optic network of
your carrier, frequently is transferred over a leased line from a
competing carrier, and finally sent back to copper wire at the
local Bell company of the destination. Many non-AT&T calls do
travel, at one point, over the AT&T network or over lines used
by AT&T, because it is so extensive and they are so large.
With the major companies there definitely is financial stability
and name recognition, which you pay for in a higher cost per
minute cost.
Tip:
Unless you a large company with specific needs (frame relay, dedicated
T-1’s) there isn’t that much difference between carriers
except price, how the invoice appears and the number of
commercials they run.
WHERE DO I BEGIN
TO UNDERSTAND MY TELEPHONE BILL?
Let’s assume you have a $135 long distance bill (all day
rate calls, excluding taxes, line charges, etc.) with 1,500
minutes, it breaks down as follows: 1,000 minutes of interstate
(between states) for $85 and 500 minutes intrastate (within your
state) for $50. The simplest step is to determine your current
Cost Per Minute (CPM). This is basically like the cost per pound
of meat or miles per gallon of gasoline. Begin by taking the total
dollar amount and dividing by the number of minutes: this will
give you your average CPM. In our example, you spend $85 and use
1,000 minutes, $85/1,000 is 8.5 CPM for interstate and for
intrastate the calculation is $50/500 is 10 cents per minute. You
are now armed with information, 8.5 CPM interstate and 10 CPM
intrastate. You can now compare pricing. You must break this down
into the intrastate and interstate pricing in order to compare
your specific calling patterns.
Tip: Know
your current interstate and Intrastate rates! Look at your
specific calling pattern to determine if you have mostly
intrastate, interstate or even calls to Mexico. Compare your
specific needs to the proposed plan, what good is a 8.5
interstate rate if all your calls are intrastate at 10 cents per
minute? You have to
shop all the prices, not just the single CPM that sounds good.
WHAT IS THE BIG DEAL
BETWEEN SIX SECOND AND 60 SECOND BILLING?
(How to slash a component of your long distance costs by 27-93%,
in just 6 seconds.)
Regardless of which long distance
company you use, be sure your calls are billed in six second,
rather than one minute increments, whenever possible. You can save
a substantial amount of money, especially if you make many short
calls, by installing six second billing.
To determine six second versus 60
second savings, let's compare calls costing ten cents a minute
with billing increments of 60 seconds
versus 6 seconds. (Six seconds equals 0.10 minute)
|
Actual |
60
second |
60
second |
6
second |
Amount |
Percentage |
|
Call |
Minimum |
$0.10 |
$0.10 |
$Over
spent |
Over
spent |
|
Length |
1
minute |
1 min
Charge |
6 sec
Charge |
6 vs. 60
sec |
|
|
0.10 |
1.00 |
$0.10 |
$0.01 |
$0.09 |
90% |
|
0.50 |
1.00 |
$0.10 |
$0.05 |
$0.05 |
50% |
|
0.90 |
1.00 |
$0.10 |
$0.09 |
$0.01 |
10% |
You can see that you
save due to six second versus full minute billing.
WHEN IS A HIGHER
RATE REALLY MORE
COST EFFECTIVE THAN A LOWER PER MINUTE? (It
is not a half cent more expensive, it is up to 80% less
expensive)
Here is an example: If you are paying
more than 4.9 cents a minute
for a
full minute billing plan and paying 5.49
cents a minute to a six second billing
carrier ( 6 second billing) it can be frequently more cost
effective to use the 5.49 cent carrier due to the practice of rounding
calls up to the next full minute. See
all of our low cost, discount long distance rates, starting at
about 4 cents a minute. Illustration.
Actual LD Carrier LD Carrier LD
Carrier Amount Percentage
|
Actual
|
LD
Carrier
|
LD
Carrier
|
LD
Carrier
|
Amount
|
Percentage
|
|
Call
|
Minimum
|
4.9-old
|
5.49-new
|
Over
spent
|
Over spent
|
|
Length
|
1
minute
|
1
min
|
Charge
|
6 sec
Charge
|
6 vs. 60 sec
|
|
0.10
|
1.00
|
$0.05 |
$0.01 |
$0.04 |
80%
|
|
0.30
|
1.00
|
$0.05 |
$0.02 |
$0.03 |
60%
|
|
0.50
|
1.00
|
$0.05 |
$0.03 |
$0.02 |
40%
|
|
0.80
|
1.00
|
$0.05 |
$0.05 |
$0.00 |
0%
|
|
1.00
|
1.00
|
$0.05 |
$0.06 |
$(0.01)
|
(20%)
|
WHERE CAN I RECEIVE THE
BEST RATES? (Everyone
advertises low prices, who really has the lowest rates?)
There are two answers to this questions:
It depends and it depends. First, if you deal direct, most major
carrier plans, especially for residential or small business, offer
little or no discount to the end user. Even if you examine one of
AT&T’s lowest rate plans, you may find it has full minute
billing, a $4.95 monthly fee and is only good for six months
before the price increases. By
comparing your rates to rates offered by brokers and resellers, you can
typically achieve a 20-50% savings over carrier direct pricing.
Because there are hundreds of resellers, the questions now become:
How hard do you want to shop? How much analysis do you want to do?
How does the new carrier compare in price, in service? How do your
find Resellers? Don’t plan on receiving your best offer by
dealing with the major carriers directly, at least initially.
The second answer is that "it
depends" on your specific calling pattern. For example.
I recently had an auto dealership that spent 95% of its long
distance charges in the state, and the rest interstate. They could
have chosen a 5.9 CPM interstate plan for their business, but
that plan had an 8.8 in-state rate. A slightly higher (6.9) interstate rate plan bit with a
5.0 intrastate rate,
maximizes their savings according to their specific calling
patterns.
Sprint, MCI and AT&T offer
basic rates in the 8 to 30 cent per minute range. And if you
don’t ask, or know to ask, you get the basic (FULL) price. A
typical, well managed company pays 7-12 cents a minute for its
long distance calls, generally higher on the AT&T network.
They achieve this through negotiation, group discounts or
purchasing through a reseller.
Tip: Price a
reseller
and then compare it the carrier. Check to see if you belong to an
organization that has negotiated a special rate with a carrier
(then see if it is still more cost effective than a Reseller).
AT&T adds In-State Connection Fee
As stated on AT&T's web site at this link:
AT&T, for customers in Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Kentucky, Massachusetts,
Missouri, New Jersey, and Oregon, has added a monthly fee called the
In-State Connection Fee. This fee is an AT&T charge and is as much as $1.95
per month. This charge is in addition to your per minute rates.
We offer long distance plans that do not offer this charge. Our long
distance plans offer the best rates in the industry, without the hidden fees
and charges. We have rates starting at 4.5¢ per minute without the hidden
stuff. If you are an AT&T customer, please check out our current long
distance plans that offer better rates without the catches.
Click here to see the plans that we have available.
Go
to
Frequently Asked Questions - Part 2
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Discount
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