Vello Conferencing Product Disappoints - Cost and Ease (
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Vello officials again blamed the first three overages on problems relating
to the carrier outage (even though one of the meetings took place three weeks
after they first notified me of the problem). The fourth error they blamed
on a bug in the self-service billing system. Apparently, when calls do not
terminate correctly, the service will let the call run out to 12 hours, making
it easy for Vello agents to identify problems—and resolve them—before the
actual bill gets sent out each month. Unfortunately, the full charges
showed up in the billing module of the Vello portal, causing me to freak out
just a little.
Even under ordinary circumstances, Vello is not the
least expensive conference call option out there. With a base rate of 12
cents per minute per caller for both the dial-in and call-out solutions (with
variable international pricing), I found Vello's pricing to be somewhat high
for toll-free services. While Unlimited Conferencing offers toll-free service
for only 6.9 cents per user per minute, FreeConference.com and Budget
Conferencing fell in the 10 to 12 cents per minute per user range, and
ConferenceCall.com lagged behind at 14 cents per. Vello said it will soon
release monthly rate bucket plans that will lower its per-minute
fees. Pricing for monthly plans will start at $45 for 500 minutes.
Some billing data is available for viewing from the billing module in Vello's
portal, but this data is not well organized or complete. The billing
module shows a line-item minute usage and cost for each participant in a
conference, but the data is not sortable, does not include participant phone
numbers, and is not presented in date order. Thankfully the PDF-based
bill—which is sent every 30 days—does a much more thorough job of giving
detailed call records. Customers can also request a hard copy of the bill
for an extra $5 a month.
Getting set up
The Vello host—the person who maintains the account on the Vello portal—does
not need to be dialed into each and every conference call. However, that
person does need to configure all the calls, so I would advise having a central
group—the IT staff, the telecommunications group or the reception
staff—maintain the portal.
Fortunately, setting up conference calls through the Web portal is quite
intuitive and easy. Once logged in, the host can apply contacts, choose
which number to call, manually input quick-dial numbers for people not in the
contact database, apply some descriptive information and choose a
schedule. For recurring calls, Vello presented multiple variations of
daily, weekly or monthly schedules, letting me adequately assign complex
meeting schedules with a single conference entry.
Contact management could be a significant headache for larger conference
calls, so Vello provides some tools to help build out the contact database in
the Vello portal. While Vello hosts can manually enter contact information
into the portal, hosts will probably prefer to import their Microsoft Outlook contact
databases using the Vello Contact Sync Tool. The tool can be installed on
systems running both Windows 2000 or later and Outlook 2000 or later.
The tool combs through the personal and corporate directories in Outlook,
identifying which contacts have already been migrated to the Vello contact
database. The host can select entire ranges or individual contacts for
import, which will send the name, e-mail, work phone and mobile phone fields to
Vello. In tests, I found that the Outlook Sync tool did not do a good job
identifying existing records that were manually added to the system.
eWEEK Labs Senior Technical Analyst Andrew Garcia can
be reached at agarcia@eweek.com.