Introducing Tele-Watch: Telecom Savings and Cloud Reporting

For nearly a decade, GILL Technologies has provided telecom savings and management solutions for businesses of all sizes, from international enterprise to smaller ventures. We specialize in controlling wireless costs. As telecom has evolved we’ve developed new and improved services, and now we’ve taken the next logical step: Tele-Watch.

Tele-Watch is our integrated cloud software and comprehensive service program, designed to provide clients with a total telecom expense management solution. We distilled years of client feedback and exhaustive testing into a system designed to meet their needs. As a result, we routinely save clients up to 50% or more on their mobile phone bills.

Tele-Watch harnesses a seamless combination of user-friendly software and in-house expertise based on these pillars:

Mobile Phone Management Software: Tele-Watch’s software side is a cloud-based service available to anyone with a web-capable device. After logging into Tele-Watch you can view your company’s complete billing and usage information. That includes records of your heaviest users, breakdowns by carrier and administrator-defined cost centers (such as branch offices and departments) and most importantly, records of billing errors and other savings opportunities.

Management in the cloud (that is, hosted remotely on a secure web server) means that you never have to employ your own IT or accounting department to install and maintain it. It also means that you don’t need to be at a particular computer or local server – just get on the Web. We handle all maintenance and updates, so all you have to do is provide billing information.

Tele-Watch software is optimized for mobile phone management, but includes tools for other telecom services, including land lines, long distance plans and internet.

Telecom Savings Analysis: Telecom analysts work hand in hand with our software to seek out savings opportunities in an evolving telecom industry. Analysts discover savings on your behalf and integrate them into your cloud reporting, providing continuous savings. We detect errors, unused entitlements and more cost-effective alternatives without forcing you to change your carrier, phone number, handset or services.

Tele-Watch ClientCare: Again and again, our clients expressed dissatisfaction with the level of service major carriers provided, so we developed “next level” customer service with ClientCare. Once you register with Tele-Watch, a ClientCare representative will provide:

  • Tech support for hardware.
  • Liaison services with your carrier so that you never need to wait on hold with them again.
  • Procurement services to help you upgrade and add handsets, headsets and other hardware in a convenient, cost-effective fashion.

Try Tele-Watch now. Head to http://www.tele-watch.com to request a demo or a free 60 day trial. For a detailed walkthrough of the Tele-Watch solution, head to http://www.gill-technologies.com/visibility.php.

Where’s Canada’s Net Neutrality? Why Does It Matter to Mobile Users?

Last month the FCC drew up policy guidelines that strongly favored net neutrality: the principle that providers should not block or impede legal internet traffic. This is an important principle for users on several fronts. Without strong net neutrality an ISP might censor websites, or slow down data transfer speeds because it dislikes particular traffic patterns. Net neutrality keeps the internet working properly – at least in the US.

Unfortunately, Canadians need to contend with much more primitive polices – or really, a lack of policy at all – courtesy of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, or CRTC. Canadian law kicked some aspects of internet regulation under the CRTC’s banner long ago and now the body doesn’t seem to know what to do with it. The CRTC’s inactivity used to be praised when Internet users were still afraid of state censorship, but that era’s gone. Nowadays, Canadian ISPs threaten net neutrality on several levels:

  • ISPs slow down peer to peer network traffic. The argument that this targets pirates is swiftly disappearing as peer to peer protocols are increasingly used to deliver legal content.
  • Infrastructure providers slow down bandwidth that it sells to wholesalers, reducing viable competition.
  • In 2005, Telus blocked access to sites maintained by the union representing Telus workers who were currently striking. No matter how you feel about that sort of thing, shouldn’t you have been able to see for yourself?

Canada has no net neutrality legislation and the CRTC’s slow, minimal regulation have the potential to become even bigger problems in the wake of the smartphone revolution. As Canadians demand mobile internet access and use technologies like VoIP to bypass onerous fees, larger carriers have an ever-stronger motive to provide tiered service, where getting unencumbered access will cost extra.

If you plan on employing a smartphone fleet carrier meddling won’t just increase your cell phone bills – it may change your core operations. If you’re counting on high mobile connectivity for specific business functions and carriers decide the traffic you want is “premium,” you might have to settle for a sub-optimal solution. Right now this scenario only covers a small number of cases, but it’s the cases we can’t think of that need protection the most. That Canadian policy threatens business innovation isn’t some far out conjecture; Google and Amazon have both asked the CRTC to stop allowing traffic shaping.

As a mobile telecom expense management firm this is a special concern for us. GILL Technologies has a special degree of competency in mixed telecom, particularly wireless internet. We want to provide competitive solutions that help clients reach new levels of success, but to do our best, we need an environment that will respect the online medium and let it act as a level playing field for competition. It’s good for businesses, good for consumers, and we hope the CRTC understands that.

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-09-14

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-09-07

  • Talked to friends working in Apple tech support. Snow Leopard transition seems to be exceptionally smooth so far. #
  • YouTube demo – Blackberry Storm 2 vs storm 1 http://bit.ly/UYjDV #
  • Overview of our comprehensive telecom solution – contact us for more info: http://bit.ly/jQzdR #
  • How Apple Will Sell 50 Million iPhones – Forbes.com http://bit.ly/158D1K #
  • T-Mobile users to be billed for bills – MSNBC.com http://bit.ly/ZV2Kx – nice way to make consumer billing errors harder to see, eh? #
  • Total cellular management from cost auditing to procurement: http://bit.ly/17aivj #
  • A World Without Apple? – Column by PC Magazine on the Apple-less mobile market http://bit.ly/49I1V2 #
  • Big ISPs solution to broadband gap: lower the FCC standards for "broadband" | Reuters http://bit.ly/4EB1zy #
  • Single point of customer service handles procurement and gets better service from carriers: http://bit.ly/JbiJL #
  • AppleInsider | Bandwidth-guzzling iPhone called "Hummer of cellphones" http://bit.ly/3xww3Q #
  • Buzz Aldrin Double Fists An iPhone And a Blackberry On a Blimp – buzz aldrin – Gizmodo http://bit.ly/3hWYNs #
  • Free initial cost audit-find out how you'd save on wireless with telecom expense management: http://bit.ly/IRM19 #

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-08-31

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-08-24

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-08-17

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-08-10

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-08-03

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-07-27