| > Honestly just ease of use. No fees. No ads. No account required. Nothing to download or install. So how are you going to stay viable in 3 to 5 years? > Just go to the website, put in the phone number and call. Ok, there are a million WebRTC betas out there right now to use for free, even AT&T offered one for the past 2 years up until they killed their WebRTC program in January. > From what I've experienced with my relatives overseas this is something that's really needed and something they have not been able to find. Sure, but once again to maintain viability, you need to offer something unique, telecom is a very competitive space, and to scale it you need to build key relationships. Setting up a WebRTC client is awesome, but they are a dime a dozen currently. |
But, the current plan is to charge the businesses that want to receive calls from their international customers for tracking and control.
We can allow the businesses to have branded links that auto-dial their number that they can share on their website, email, etc. With these they can also track the source of the caller, do call recording, and route the calls how they want.
For travel businesses, for example, that do business with primarily customers outside their country this is a problem that we can solve for them. Most people would never dial an international number, but they'll click a link and make a free call from their browser.