Inexpensive for medium size businesses. Cutting costs is good business sense, and Ringcentral has very competitive pricing for about ten to fifteen extensions, if you use the right number of minutes. And have your phone service configured the way they want you to. For everyone else they're sometimes more expensive than other services.
Accessible and easy to use. Both from what has been said by others and based on their website design, Ringcentral's service appears to have a comfortable layout that can be readily configured without having to hunt for information or call technical support. Over the next few weeks, much more information about this should be available.
Rollover Minutes. I know what you're thinking: rollover minutes are good. I want to be able to keep what I don't use for later. But Ringcentral does not actually provide rollover minutes. They have a program they call rollover which really only provides 12-month flex minutes in case you go over your regular monthly limit. Unused monthly minutes are still lost. This is one of the things I have most often heard complaints about regarding Ringcentral.
Poor Customer Service. A hosted PBX service should have a quality inbound phone team. Ringcentral had a mediocre virtual attendant, and when I reached a live person I was answered by a bored-sounding man that introduced himself, thanked me for calling the ultimate provider in the industry, coughed, then started his spiel over from the beginning. This is typical of my experiences with calling Ringcentral. That said, he was able to answer my questions readily enough, but didn't take the step towards being helpful, friendly, or engaging. I have also heard stories from other hosted PBX customers that tell of being unable to change account settings, getting no assistance from the company, and having to just cut off payments and get a new phone number.
Expensive for Small Businesses. This is particularly bad because they market themselves to appear to be a great deal for this group of customers. But while their costs appear low, they require a year-long commitment in order to get the low price and do not provide all their services for these low-cost contracts. If you want all their features, they can cost twice as much as their competitors for companies of five or less extensions.
Advertising over advantage. Designed to pull in new customers at a high speed, Ringcentral appears to spend more money on selling their service than improving it. They're a venture capital company, and are running through that money buying advertising, adwords, and offering people like us lots of money if we'll send people to buy from their website. I could concievably make a good chunk of money if I were to tell everyone that Ringcentral was the best provider and send them new customers - around twenty-five dollars per referral, which is nothing to sneeze at. Because of this, pretty much every other hosted pbx comparison site out there is singing Ringcentral's praises. Now you know why there's a difference between what I have to say and what they have to say.
Glitzy. Ringcentral made a flashy website with stylish graphics, plenty of reviews and testimonials, limited time offers, and smiling people. These are all good things when taken to the appropriate degree. It struck me as a bit much. It was still an excellent site, with plenty of information readily available through several menus so as to intuitive to any searcher, but it struck me as overly showy.
About the minutes, you get a fixed number of minutes per month on your plan -- these are not rollover minutes. However, if you need minutes to use over the amount that comes with your plan and you purchase these, then they ARE rollover minutes -- they stay in your account until they are used and do not expire at the end of the month.
They simply offer you some minutes 100 or so that you can use over the course of a year. Shame on them for this. just call it what it is - a bucket of free minutes that canbe used over a year - just stop trying to deceive people with the idea that they offer rollover minutes.
0 out of 10 based on marketing techniques to get me to sign