Choosing a VoIP system is not the same decision it was five years ago. The market has matured significantly. Options that required a telecommunications engineer and a $20,000 hardware budget in 2015 are now browser-configurable and deployable in days. That's good news — but it also means the number of choices, vendors, pricing models, and opinions has exploded, making it genuinely hard to know what you actually need versus what a sales rep wants you to buy.
This guide cuts through that noise. We've been deploying and managing VoIP systems across Southern California since 2012 — for law offices, construction firms, logistics companies, dental practices, and professional services teams of all sizes. What follows is the framework we use to match a business to the right VoIP system, in the order the decisions actually matter.
Step 1: Assess Your Team's Actual Communication Needs
Before evaluating a single vendor or piece of hardware, you need a clear picture of how your team actually communicates. The answers to a handful of questions will shape every downstream decision.
Do you have remote workers or a fully in-office team? A team that is entirely in one office has simpler requirements than a team with field staff, work-from-home employees, or staff across multiple locations. VoIP handles distributed teams natively — but the configuration varies. Remote workers need softphone apps or desk phones at their home office, and your VoIP system needs to be configured to ring them as part of hunt groups and ring strategies, not as an afterthought.
Do you have multiple locations? Multi-site businesses are where VoIP's advantages over traditional systems are most dramatic. With a traditional PBX, each location is an island — separate systems, separate call routing, and inter-office calls go over public lines just like any external call. With a shared VoIP platform, all locations share one dial plan. Transferring a call from your Corona office to your Riverside office is the same as transferring to the next desk.
What is your inbound call volume, and how is it currently handled? A business receiving 20 calls per day has different needs than one receiving 200. High-volume inbound operations need call queues, on-hold music, position announcements, and agent dashboards. A smaller office might only need a clean IVR and a reliable hunt group. Being honest about your volume determines whether you need a full call center module or a standard business PBX.
Do callers need to reach specific people, or specific departments? The answer determines how your IVR tree and hunt groups are structured. A professional services firm where clients call their specific attorney or advisor needs direct extension dialing and a clear auto-attendant. A product company where callers need sales, support, or billing needs a department-based routing tree.
Step 2: Understand Your Bandwidth Requirements
Every VoIP call consumes bandwidth. The math is simple and the numbers are comfortable for any modern business internet connection, but it's worth understanding so you can provision correctly and avoid quality issues.
A single VoIP call using the standard G.711 codec consumes approximately 80–100 Kbps of bandwidth in each direction (upstream and downstream). The HD G.722 codec, which we use on Grandstream GXP2170 phones, runs slightly higher at around 128 Kbps per call but delivers noticeably better audio fidelity. For planning purposes, use 100 Kbps per simultaneous call as a conservative figure.
| Team Size | Est. Simultaneous Calls | VoIP Bandwidth Needed | Recommended Upstream |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1–5 users | 2–3 calls | ~300 Kbps | 5 Mbps minimum |
| 6–15 users | 5–8 calls | ~800 Kbps | 10 Mbps minimum |
| 16–30 users | 10–15 calls | ~1.5 Mbps | 25 Mbps minimum |
| 31–60 users | 20–30 calls | ~3 Mbps | 50 Mbps minimum |
| 60+ users | Varies | Plan individually | Dedicated business fiber recommended |
Raw bandwidth is only half the equation. Quality of Service (QoS) configuration on your network equipment is equally important. Without QoS, voice packets compete equally with video streams, file uploads, and web traffic. When the network gets busy, voice degrades first — resulting in choppy audio, echo, and dropped calls. Proper QoS marks voice packets as highest-priority traffic and ensures they flow uninterrupted regardless of what else is happening on the network.
When we deploy a VoIP system, QoS configuration on your router and switches is always included. It's not optional. A VoIP system without proper QoS is a VoIP system that will eventually frustrate your team and your callers.
Step 3: Build Your Feature Checklist
Not every team needs every VoIP feature. But knowing which features matter to your operation before you evaluate vendors prevents you from either overpaying for capabilities you'll never use or discovering post-deployment that a critical feature requires a costly upgrade.
Core Features (Every Team)
- Auto-attendant / IVR
- Voicemail with email delivery
- Hold music and call transfer
- Hunt groups / ring groups
- Mobile softphone app
- Caller ID management
- After-hours routing rules
- Number porting from current carrier
Growth Features (Most Teams)
- Call recording (auto or on-demand)
- Call analytics and reporting dashboard
- Conference bridge (multi-party calls)
- Direct Inward Dialing (DID) per user
- Multiple location dial plan
- E911 per-extension address registration
- Paging and overhead announcements
- Busy lamp field (BLF) on desk phones
Advanced Features (Complex Operations)
- Call queue with position announcements
- Agent login / logout (call center mode)
- CRM integration (Salesforce, HubSpot, etc.)
- MS Teams direct routing integration
- Custom IVR with time-of-day conditions
- Fax-to-email (T.38 fax support)
- Call whisper / barge / monitor
- API access for custom integrations
Remote / Distributed Team Features
- WebRTC browser-based softphone
- iOS and Android mobile apps
- VPN-free remote extension registration
- Per-user presence and availability status
- Hot-desking (any phone, any location)
- Simultaneous ring to desk and mobile
- Video calling (softphone or desk unit)
- Remote admin portal access
Step 4: On-Premise vs. Cloud-Hosted — Making the Right Call
This is the decision that generates the most debate, and the honest answer is that for the vast majority of small and mid-size businesses, cloud-hosted wins. But understanding why — and the exceptions — helps you make the call with confidence.
Best for: Most SMBs, distributed teams, businesses without dedicated IT staff
- No on-site server hardware to purchase or maintain
- Updates, security patches, and feature additions managed by provider
- Scales up or down by adding/removing seats monthly
- Built-in redundancy across multiple data centers
- Accessible from any location with internet — remote workers are fully integrated
- Lower upfront cost; predictable monthly seat pricing
- Managed backups and disaster recovery included
Best for: High-security environments, very high call volumes, compliance-specific use cases
- Full control over call data — stays on your hardware, your network
- One-time hardware investment (amortized over 5–8 years)
- No dependency on provider availability or pricing changes
- Can operate on internal LAN without internet dependency
- Higher upfront cost; requires IT staff or managed IT partner for maintenance
- Less suitable for distributed/remote teams without VPN infrastructure
- Requires hardware replacement cycle planning
Our standard recommendation is Sangoma's hosted PBX platform for cloud deployments — it delivers the full FreePBX feature set with enterprise uptime guarantees, managed infrastructure, and a familiar admin interface for our team and our clients. For clients with specific data sovereignty or compliance requirements, we deploy FreePBX on a hardened server on your premises.
On MS Teams integration: Many businesses ask whether they can use Microsoft Teams as their phone system. Teams does support Direct Routing via SIP, which connects Teams to a VoIP platform. For businesses already invested in Microsoft 365, this can work well — we configure Direct Routing through Twilio or Cisco SIP trunks to bridge Teams calling with a full-featured PBX backend. The result is Teams as the softphone with FreePBX handling all the call routing logic.
Step 5: Hardware Selection — Desk Phones vs. Softphones
The hardware question is more nuanced than it appears. The right answer depends on your team's work patterns, not just cost.
For most small business deployments, our standard configuration is Grandstream GXP2170 units on reception and primary desks, with the Sangoma mobile app provisioned for remote workers and field staff. This covers the entire team without requiring a mixed-hardware support burden.
Step 6: Understanding VoIP Pricing Models
VoIP pricing varies significantly across providers and deployment models. Understanding what you're actually comparing prevents surprises on your first bill.
| Pricing Model | How It Works | Best For | Watch Out For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Per-Seat (Monthly) | Fixed monthly fee per user account, all features included | Most SMBs; predictable teams that know their headcount | Unused seats still billed; check minimum seat requirements |
| Managed VoIP (IT Partner) | Flat monthly fee covering platform, hardware support, admin, and moves/adds/changes | Businesses without internal IT; those wanting one vendor responsible for everything | Higher monthly rate than self-managed, but true total cost is usually lower |
| SIP Trunk + On-Prem PBX | Separate line rental from SIP trunk provider (Twilio, Cisco, etc.) + self-hosted PBX server | High-volume call centers; businesses with IT staff to manage the PBX | Requires technical administration; upfront server cost; ongoing maintenance |
| All-in-One UCaaS Platforms | Single monthly subscription covering voice, video, messaging, and integrations (e.g., RingCentral, 8x8) | Teams prioritizing single-vendor simplicity; heavy MS Teams / Slack users | Higher per-seat cost; limited customization; proprietary lock-in; support quality varies |
The pricing model we manage for IT Center clients is the managed VoIP approach — a flat monthly fee that covers the platform, hardware support, all configuration changes, and proactive monitoring. This means our clients don't pay per move/add/change, don't manage their own PBX admin console unless they want to, and have one number to call when anything phone-related needs attention.
Step 7: Migration Timeline — What to Expect
A well-planned VoIP migration causes minimal disruption. A poorly planned one can leave your team confused and your callers frustrated. Here's the realistic timeline for a 10–30 person deployment.
Support Considerations: Who Owns the Phone System When Something Goes Wrong?
Support is where many DIY or budget VoIP decisions reveal their true cost. When a call is dropping, when the auto-attendant stops routing correctly, or when a remote employee can't register their extension — who fixes it, and how fast?
- Provider-level support handles infrastructure outages and platform-level issues. Response times vary widely. Many cloud VoIP providers have ticket-based support with 4–24 hour response windows — unacceptable when your phones are down during business hours.
- Self-managed PBX puts all configuration and troubleshooting responsibility on your internal IT staff. If you don't have someone with FreePBX experience, this becomes a liability quickly.
- Managed VoIP through IT Center means one point of contact for everything — platform issues, hardware problems, configuration changes, and user questions. Our clients call (888) 221-0098 and talk to someone who knows their system. We monitor the platform proactively and often identify and resolve issues before clients are aware of them.
When evaluating any VoIP solution, ask specifically: what is the SLA for phone-down emergencies? What number do employees call when their phone stops working? How long does a configuration change take? These questions reveal the real support model behind the marketing.
Composite Deployment: Construction Firm, Multi-Site + Field
Commercial GC — Multi-site VoIP with field integration
A typical Southern California construction firm has office staff, project managers, and field crews who need reliable communication across job sites and the main office. A common starting point — a mix of personal cell phones and a basic office landline — creates communication gaps: field staff are unreachable through the business number, office calls are not tracked consistently, and there is no professional auto-attendant for inbound clients.
In engagements like this, IT Center has deployed FreePBX-based systems with Grandstream desk phones at the main office, the Sangoma mobile app provisioned for project managers and field supervisors, and an IVR that routes inbound calls to the office team during business hours with clean after-hours handling. Field staff get a consistent business-number presence — when a project manager calls a subcontractor or a client, the caller ID reflects the company line, not a personal cell. Voicemail-to-email routes messages from job sites into the team's inbox immediately.
The outcome is a more professional client experience, cleaner internal communication, and a system that scales as the company adds project managers and expands to new job sites — without adding hardware overhead at a central location.
The IT Center Standard Deployment Stack
After 14 years of deploying and managing business phone systems across Southern California, our standard VoIP deployment for a growing team looks like this:
- Platform: Sangoma Hosted PBX (cloud) or FreePBX on-premise for compliance-sensitive clients — both delivering the same full feature set without vendor lock-in
- Desk hardware: Grandstream GXP2170 as the primary unit; Yealink T54W or GVC3210 for conference rooms and specialized deployments
- Remote workers: Sangoma softphone app (iOS + Android) and desktop softphone for any team member working outside the office
- SIP trunking: Sangoma's built-in trunking for most deployments; Twilio SIP trunks for high-volume or API-integrated call environments; Cisco SIP trunks for clients with existing Cisco infrastructure
- Network: QoS configured on all routers and switches; cellular LTE failover for mission-critical phone availability
- Support: Included in IT Center managed IT plans with same-business-day response for phone system issues and direct access to the team that deployed and configured your system
This combination delivers enterprise-grade call handling, full remote worker integration, and no proprietary lock-in — at a cost that makes sense for teams of 5 to 75.
Making Your Decision
If you've worked through the steps in this guide, you now have a clear picture of what your team needs, what bandwidth you're working with, which features matter, and what deployment model fits your situation. The remaining question is execution — whether you manage the deployment internally or partner with an IT firm that has done it dozens of times.
Either path is legitimate. But the firms we see struggle most with VoIP are the ones who chose a system that looked right on paper and then tried to configure it without experience in PBX administration, SIP troubleshooting, or network QoS. The technology is mature and reliable when deployed correctly. The "when deployed correctly" part is where most issues live.
Our honest advice: Spend less time comparing vendor feature matrices and more time talking to someone who has actually deployed VoIP in your industry and your region. The technical specs between comparable systems are less important than the quality of the implementation and the reliability of the ongoing support behind it.
Get a VoIP System Designed for Your Team
IT Center designs, deploys, and manages VoIP systems for Southern California businesses. We'll assess your team's needs, design a system that fits your workflow, handle the entire migration including number porting, and support it ongoing. No guesswork, no surprises.
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