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Business
Speakerphones 101
Most
people who are in business today whether in the position of owner,
office manager or just the one who "does the phones" have a speakerphone
on their desk.
The first thing we'll do is to divide
speakerphones into two major groups:
1.Full Duplex
2.Half Duplex
(And yes we are talking about electronic and digital phones, of
all makes and models, Lucent, Panasonic, Nortel, Toshiba, Comdial,
Nitsuko etc.)
All telephone speakerphones are
half-or-full duplex. The difference between them can be fairly
large to you, especially if you do a lot of handsfree calling.
What half duplex means is that only one side of the conversation
can be speaking at a time. In other words, if you are in a conversation
with someone and they are speaking, you MUST wait for them to
finish to begin your own speech. The reason is the speakerphone
itself can only have data, or conversation if you will, heading
in one direction at one time. Around half of the manufacturers
out there have Half duplex speakerphones and this is the single
major reason for "clipping" or hearing your conversation "drop
out". Pretty annoying, huh?
Most folks dont know the difference,
because the manufacturers have made the actual speed that the
phone switches from "Talk" to "listen" fast enough that they work
pretty good. Full duplex speakerphones work differently, and better
I think. On full duplex phones, you can have the best of both
worlds. You can talk at the same time as the other person who
is on the line with you. Your conversation is much clearer, and
therefore much better understood. And there is no clipping.
To test a phone to see if it is
half or full, make a handsfree call. Stand 4-6 feet from your
phone and simultaneously have youself and the person on the other
end start counting from one to ten. While doing this, have someone
else in your office put their head down by the phone and LISTEN
carefully to see if they can hear the person talking from the
other end throughout the excercise. If they can, than your phone
is Full duplex, and if they cant, or it "drops out" than your
phone is "half duplex". Do this test when you're buying your system,
and your salesperson will probably learn something from you. The
second most important thing to making your speakerphone work right
is your computer. I know this might sound a little strange, but
read on....
The microphones in a typical office
phone are designed to be very sensitive, and most of the manufacturers
haven't given too much thought as to what those microphones are
sensitive TO. Almost everybody has a computer on their desk these
days, and if they don't now, they will soon. And two things that
all computers come with are a fan, and a drive. Both of these
things make and produce and send out small high frequency noise
that is not audible to the human ear, but BINGO!, your microphone
on your phone will pick it up. When it does, typically it will
degrade the performance of a typical speakerphone by 35% to 80%.
Have you ever heard someone in your office say that "my speakerphone
must have been bad from the factory, because it's never worked
right"??? Have them go to their desk, and shut off their computer
and LEAVE IT OFF for at least 10 minutes (to dissipate any high
frequency "noise" that might persist around the computer.) Have
them make a handsfree call, and I'll bet they'll be surprised
at how much better their phone works. To fix this problem, if
you find it applies to you, try to make sure that your phone is
on the opposite side of your desk from your computer. Another
BIG thing to look out for is whether someone else in your office
has the BACK of their computer facing your workstation. If they
do, your phone hears their computer better than it hears you.
In any event, We hope this helps
you, and if we can be of further assistance or if you just have
a problem you can't seem to get remedied, call or email us at
tellearn.com, our advice is good and you can't beat our price,
because it's FREE!!
Chris
Walsh
Telephone System Learning Seminars, Inc.
http://tellearn.com
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