Where to Order AT&T Conference Calling Plan

 

 

AT&T Conference calling is more of "business to business" solution, and it's not like you can sign up at a kiosk in a mall. 

 

If your local area's telephone carrier is AT&T, call up a rep and have him come over for a brief presentation. 

 

Pay attention to technical terms like its uptime, equipment requirements, terms of contract.   

What to do next to get the best deal possible:

 

After you get all the facts about the AT&T's conference calling service, send the rep home and call up a local competitor.  Give them the detail of proposals from AT&T (or any other companies that you're receiving bids from) and persuade them to give you better deal. 

 

If AT&T offers equipment leasing, go over the technical support in detail.  Even if you can buy the equipment outright or have an option to $1 Purchase at the end lease, do the cheapest rate leasing instead.

 

Cheaper Conference Calling Alternative?

 

If you're holding a small conference call, try using a conference calling feature pre-built on your cell phone. 

 

The downside is that the main "connector" must stay on the phone to bridge the call the whole time.  In other words, caller A connects callers B to C, but B and C will get hung up as soon as the caller A decides to exit the conference.   

 

Good for casual user who do not regularly hold conference calls or call with three or less callers.  

 

To reach a AT&T rep by calling toll free 866-800-8480 Monday through Friday 9am to 7pm EST. 

 

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