Remaking The Bankruptcy Law Firm: Telephone Systems

Grasshopper Virtual Phone SystemWhen attempting to create a location-independent law firm, the first thing that’s important to handle is how telephones are used.  Though we live in a digital world, for most the telephone is still the primary means of connecting.  Courts need to get through to the office, clients call with a myriad of questions and issues, and we as attorneys are required to be available.

I thought initially of having a voice mail system that used the 4-Hour Workweek system of, “I’m not here, I’ll call you back at 2:00pm, leave a number and buzz off,” approach but quickly discarded it as unworkable for all but a few people in the office.

The old telephone system was unworkable, cumbersome and costly to maintain.  14 lines into the office just to be sure that callers never got a busy signal, proprietary handsets that could not be easily swapped out for replacements in the event of breakage, and lots of wires holding us to our desks.

If you’ve got a wired phone that lives on your hard-wired phone system, you’re hard-wired to your desk.  Definitely NOT location-independent.

I tried RingCentral, a virtual phone system that lets you create multiple mailboxes and forward them to a variety of places, but ultimately ditched it.  Though a great system and one that I think you should look into, RingCentral fell short in a variety of ways.  For example:

RingCentral is a VOIP (Internet-based) phone system, which means that if their central servers go down then so does your phone system; and

RingCentral’s mailboxes don’t offer a huge degree of customization in the way phones are answered and calls handled.

So in the end I went back to Grasshopper, a phone system I’ve been using for my own virtual law firm for a number of years.  The idea behind Grasshopper is simple – it takes what would otherwise be an expensive and full-featured phone system and turns it into a web-based service.

Here’s how it works:  your caller dials your number and is met with an auto-attendant greeting (“Welcome to blah blah blah, if you know your party’s extension dial it at any time.  For a dial-by-name directory dial 8, for the operator dial 0, etc.”)  You choose your extension and dial it.  The recipient’s extension dials and they pick up or send it to voice mail.

Simple, right?

There are a few things going on under the hood that make it spectacular:

The extension can ring to any phone – a cell phone, a desk phone, a Skype phone … any kind of phone you want.  This means I can program Grasshopper to ring my extension (which happens to be 704) in my office, on my home phone line, my cell phone … anywhere I choose.  So when someone calls me and connects with me, it doesn’t matter where I am physically.

You can choose when your extension rings to which phone.  I can set it up that my extension rings to my office phone Mondays from 9:00am to 1:00pm, my cell phone on Tuesdays, my home phone on Thursdays, and on and on.

You can shut down your phone entirely.  If my paralegal is out to lunch from 12:00pm-1:00pm each day, I can tell Grasshopper to stop sending calls to her during that time and send them instead directly to voice mail.  If I know I like to get “real work” done each day from 3:00pm-5:00pm then I can tell Grasshopper to send all calls to voice mail during that time.  My receptionist, who handles all new client calls, goes to lunch at 12:30pm-1:30pm each day; during that time, I tell Grasshopper to send her calls to a virtual assistant.  No more lost calls for us!

Grasshopper sends all voice mail messages to the recipient’s email account in mp3 format.  When I miss a call I don’t have to dial in and listen to messages – they come to me.  But more important than that, I can save those mp3 files to the client’s folder in our computer system.  Record-keeping becomes a breeze!

With Grasshopper, there’s never a busy signal.  Though the system is POTS (plain old telephone system) lines rather than Internet-based, when someone calls my firm’s main phone line they never get a busy signal – period.  So now instead of having to pay for 14 phone lines (at $50 per month, that adds up fast) for 6 people, I can just have 6 office phone lines going to their desks.  That saves us $400 per month right there.  Cha-ching!

Of course, we needed to keep our “main” phone line and set up call forwarding to the phone number provided by Grasshopper.  But our new business cards will have the Grasshopper-provided phone number on them, so eventually that old number will be a relic.  We will eventually decide whether to keep it or mothball it, but I suspect it will remain on the books for a number of years at least (it’s a good number).

Once I signed the firm up for Grasshopper we hired a voiceover artist on Elance for $125 to do a series of outgoing messages for us – the main one (“Thank you for calling Shaev & Fleischman …”), the transfer messages (what people hear when they’re on hold), and a few other main ones such as the one for directions and such.

Each month we’re looking at a significant cost savings over a “regular” phone system.  More important, though, is the fact that the entire firm is now location-independent … at least, as far as the phone system is concerned.

Disclosure:  The links to Grasshopper contained in this post are affiliate links.  If you click on those links and ultimately become a customer of Grasshopper I will get a commission.  That commission does not increase your cost for the Grasshopper service at all.  Quite frankly, it’s not a ton of money in my pocket but it does help defray the overhead costs of this site.  You can also find Grasshopper service online by doing a quick Google search.

Related posts:

  1. Remaking The Bankruptcy Law Firm: A Journey
  2. Phone Tag And The Virtual Lawyer
  3. Vonage, another choice
  • Barry
    Why exactly is Grasshopper better than RingCentral? RingCentral does all of the things you just described. I've used RingCentral for years for my law firm. No real problems. If you give out your Grasshopper number and Grasshopper later goes down or is unreliable, your firm will not be receiving those calls. Doesn't matter if its VOIP or otherwise
  • JayFleischman
    True enough, but with POTS lines coming in you're less likely to experience service disruptions due to the Internet. In addition, Grasshopper allows for greater flexibility in timing of call routing. I can turn on/off with RingCentral, but I can't schedule beyond that. On Grasshopper I have my receptionist get extension 0 calls from 9a-12p, and 1p-5p. From 12p-1p a VA steps in, and again from 5p-8p another VA. On weekends my partner gets extension 710 (new callers), but not during the week. On and on.
  • billbalena
    One question: When a call is directed to my iPhone, does it go to Grasshopper voicemail, or the iPhone's?

    I have been looking for an alternative to the extremely poor service I receive from Alltel. Looked at Grasshopper, but their website really didn't address most of my questions. This post did just that.
  • JayFleischman
    Bill, the call goes to your Grasshopper VM if the transfer fails or you don't pick up.
  • billbalena
    One of the questions I have had about Grasshopper not addressed on their website is this: When a call is directed to my iPhone what prevents the call from going into the voicemail for my cell phone?

    I have been weighing options for office phone alternatives since December when my landline carrier raised my bill for no apparent reason. I looked at Grasshopper, but did not understand how to integrate it with my office system. Thanks a million for the explanation.
  • Good article, Jay. Question for you - what number/phone do you, your secretary, or paralegal use? Do they simply have company cell phones or is it being forwarded to your old phone system? If the latter, how do you ditch the old phone system eventually? I'm trying to move our firm to be more technological and really would like to try out this suggestion, but I'm trying to figure out what do for the hardware on our side.
  • JayFleischman
    My in-house people have stand-alone single-line phones on their desks. My virtual staffers have their home lines or cell phones. I personally use Google Voice, which will ring all of my phones simultaneously.
  • i'm not a lawyer, nor do i play one on TV :-). But my dad IS a lawyer, and I'm his IT Manager. He suggested I take a look at your site. I'm definitely impressed, and I really appreciate having a resource where I can gain insight on the specific technology tools I can implement to enhance our practice and improve the services we deliver to our clients.

    As for Grasshopper, it looks really cool and I'll definitely be researching this as an option--of course I'll use your links if we decide to sign up!

    Thanks!!



  • JayFleischman
    Rachel, welcome to Untethered Lawyer. The folks at Lakelaw are lucky to have you as part of their team.
  • I use Vocalocity.Com. We have a virtual office with 3 to 4 extensions, each person in a different location. Once concern I had was other providers charging for minutes. Some charged for both minutes of calls going to the provider and then to the extension. (In other words a connected call at 4 cents a minute would run 8 cents a minute). Some would just charge or deduct minutes for one end of the trip. (4 cents in but not 4 cents connecting to the extension, let's say). Vocalocity was a little higher but it did not have minute costs. Also, it includes my fax numbers -- faxes sent and received via the email client.
  • Get work Jay. Another tip, set up an extension as "If you are a Judge, Clerk, Attorney or Trustee, push XXX", and route that call directly to your cell.
  • JayFleischman
    Thanks Andy - our main outgoing message begins with, "If you are a lawyer or calling from a court, please dial Extension 719."
blog comments powered by Disqus