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Calliflower - A Conference Call Service
Communications and meetings are expensive. Travel, while it can be key to successful business, is expensive. Perhaps you’re cutting back on your travel budget because of the economy. Sometimes you need to meet with customers on regular basis. Maybe you’ve even considered online meetings.
Online meetings and conference calls are often touted as a replacement for getting together face to face. But let’s face it – the average online meeting isn’t a great experience. In fact, it’s often downright awful! Who hasn’t experienced:
- Not knowing who is on the call with you. Most calls start with a role call – “Is John here? Susan?” -- but even so, you might not know if that person is still there, or has even arrived.
- Interruptions from chime tones, people speaking over each other, obnoxious hold music, or children and pets making a noise in the background.
- Waiting while one person downloads the document sharing application – time that other people had to sit and wait.
You might want to try Calliflower by iotum. (Disclosure here—my brother Alec is one of iotum’s owners.) Calliflower is a web based solution for hassle free online meetings and conference calls. For just $50/month you get unlimited conference calls with local dial-in access from 15 countries around the world, plus unlimited document sharing for presentations and other common office documents.
For a limited time, Calliflower is offering 14 days of absolutely free use – no strings attached.
At the end of the 14 days, if you don’t agree that it’s worth every penny of the $50/month they’re asking, they simply turn off the premium features. You’ll still be able to continue to use the free features, like conference calling, chat, and free recordings, though.
Learn how you can have better, cheaper and more effective online meetings by visiting and trying Calliflower today. You’ll save money and be more effective.
http://apps.calliflower.com/billing/subscribe?coupon_code=OFFER66.
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Comments
I just found a Seth Godin post that talks about Calliflower (at least in passing) in the context of conference calls.