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Google Voice™ For Dummies®

Table of Contents

Introduction

About This Book

Foolish Assumptions

Conventions Used in This Book

How This Book Is Organized

Part I: Setting up Google Voice

Part II: Maximizing Your Voice

Part III: Maximizing Your Handset

Part IV: Playing Well with Others

Part V: The Part of Tens

Icons Used in This Book

Part I: Setting Up Google Voice

Chapter 1: A Day in Your Google Voice Life

Discovering Google Voice

Waking Up with Google Voice

At Work with Google Voice

Relaxing at Home with Google Voice

Grasping the Bottom Line

Saving time and reducing stress

Saving money

Gaining control

Chapter 2: Getting Ready for Google Voice

Assigning Your Cell Phone Number to Google Voice

Getting a New Number from Google Voice

Choosing an area code

Using your new Google Voice number

Saving Money on Your Cell Phone Bill

Getting a New Cell Phone for Google Voice

Handling Your Home Phone

Handling Work Phones

Creating a Google Account

Setting Up a Google Profile

Chapter 3: Setting Up Google Voice

Getting Invited

Choosing an Area Code and Phone Number

Setting up your phone number

Disseminating your new phone number

Getting General Settings Correct

Choosing General settings 1: Overall settings

Sharing your greetings

Choosing General settings 2: Handling live calls

Verifying Your Phones

Being there

Stepping through verification

Setting Which Phones Ring

Focusing On General/Default Settings

Chapter 4: Upgrading to Google Voice from GrandCentral

Making Special Considerations for Alaska, Hawaii, and Canada

What about the maple leaf crew?

Baked Alaska – and boiling Hawaiians

Discovering How Google Got Your GrandCentral Account?

Understanding the Differences

Barriers to entry

Et tu, iPhone?

Before You Hurry Up, Wait

Creating a Gmail account

Keeping contact(s) with GrandCentral

Saving your GrandCentral voicemails and recordings

Making the Move

Rerecording your name and greeting

Importing your GrandCentral contacts

Importing your voicemails and recordings

Touring Google Voice

Finding the new stuff

Finding more

Part II: Maximizing Your Voice

Chapter 5: Managing People in Google Voice

Importing Contacts into Google

Export and importing Webmail contacts and e-mail

Exporting a CSV file from your mail reader

Entering data into a CSV file

Importing data from a CSV file

Combining contacts in Google Voice

Working with Groups

Creating and deleting groups

Adding and removing contacts from groups

Changing settings at the group level

Managing Settings at the Group Level

Chapter 6: Changing Settings in Google Voice

Adjusting Settings and Strategies

Changing Which Phones Ring

Finding out about phone forwarding

Changing phone forwarding settings

Using ListenIn

Changing ListenIn settings

Pushing buttons for ListenIn

Changing Voicemail Greetings

Finding out what you can do with voicemail messages

Changing voicemail greeting settings

Working with voicemail messages on the line

Changing Text Message Settings

Chapter 7: Saving Time and Money

Saving Money with Phone Flexibility

Shifting a call to another phone

Saving money live with Google Voice

Dialing into Google Voice directly

Using GOOG-411 from the voice menu

Saving – or losing – on your cell phone text count

Can you go prepaid?

Making Calls To and From Other Countries

Adding credit where credit is due

Checking the rates

Traveling to other countries

Chapter 8: Managing Phones with Google Voice

Calling with Google Voice Is Different

Dialing out using Google Voice

Using forwarding for Google Voice

Porting a phone number to Google Voice

Using the Google Voice Web Site for Calls

Going back to the future with Google Voice

Calling or texting from the Google Voice Web site

Getting (Secret) Calls from the Web

Forwarding Voicemail Messages and Recordings

Chapter 9: Using the Inbox and Handling Calls

Using the Google Voice Inbox

Message notifications

Performing multiple-item actions

Searching messages

Using folders

Optimizing your Inbox

Handling Calls with Google Voice

Options for all incoming calls

Emergency phone registration

Using keyboard commands

Part III: Maximizing Your Handset

Chapter 10: Using the Google Voice Mobile Web Site

Benefitting from Google Voice

Finding Out What the GV Mobile Site Can Do

Understanding What the GV Mobile Site Can’t Do

Working with Limitations of the GV Mobile Site

Using GV Mobile

Chapter 11: Using Google Voice with the iPhone

Using Google Voice with an iPhone

Dialers for the iPhone

Using a dialer versus using the Web

Using dialers with iPod Touch

Finding out what dialers are available

Using Workarounds If You Don’t Have a Dialer

Chapter 12: Using Google Voice on Android Phones

Using Android: A Google Voice Natural

Using Dialers for Android Phones

Chapter 13: Using Google Voice on BlackBerry Phones

BlackBerry: Cool Then, Cool Again

Using a Dialer on BlackBerry

Part IV: Playing Well with Others

Chapter 14: Using Google Voice with Gmail

Exploring What Makes Gmail Cool

Using Gmail for Google Voice

Using Gmail inside the firewall

Gmail and the kitchen sync

Touring Gmail for Google Voice

The Google Voice Inbox

Important Gmail features

Forwarding through the fog

Translating Transcriptions

Giving Voice to Google Apps

Chapter 15: Chatting, Talking, and Using Your Gizmo

Untangling the Spaghetti of Offerings

Using Gmail Chat

Google Talk

Gizmo5

Chapter 16: Using Google Voice for Business

Using Search in Organizations

Google Voice for Employees

Using Google Voice features at work

Determining what doesn’t work so well

Using Google Voice at work versus for work

Using Google Voice for Small Business

Using Google Voice in the Enterprise

Part V: The Part of Tens

Chapter 17: Ten Points of Netiquette for Google Voice

Don’t Announce It’s Google Voice

Tighten the Noose Gradually

Sell the Switch

Minimize Cell Use during Meetings

Plan Calls around Google Voice

Turn Off Phone Screening for Phone Meetings

Move Calls from Skype to Google Voice

Smooth the Transition to E-Mail

Get Permission for Recordings

Know When Not to Use Google Voice

Chapter 18: Ten Online Resources for Google Voice

gvDaily.com

Google Voice Online Support

Google Voice Support Site

Official Google Voice Blog

Craig Walker on Twitter

YouTube

Lifehacker

TechCrunch

GigaOm

Google Alerts

Chapter 19: Ten Key Google Voice Features for Business

Cheaper Calls

Free Conference Calls

Free Call Recording and Sharing

E-Mail Notifications and Transcripts

Free Text Messaging with Records

Contacts Integration

One Number to Ring Them All

Variable Greetings

Switchboard Functionality

Cell Phone Apps and Mobile Site

Google Voice™ For Dummies®

by Bud E. Smith & Chris Dannen

Foreword by Craig Walker & Vincent Paquet Google Voice Team

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About the Authors

Bud Smith grew up on the Left Coast and moved north — he couldn’t go much further west — to Silicon Valley 20 years ago to work for a technology startup. He’s an experienced technology author, computer magazine editor, product manager, and marketer. He’s been writing about online communications since the early days of 14.4Kbps modems — about 1 percent of typical broadband speed today. His phones and other portable devices have included early Palms and BlackBerrys and worked for Apple when it introduced Newton, a distant ancestor of the iPhone he carries today. His books include Creating Web Pages For Dummies, now in its 9th Edition, and Marketing Online For Dummies. He holds a Master of Science degree in Information Systems from the London School of Economics.

Chris Dannen grew up and works on the Right Coast and is currently based in New York City. His technology interests include a focus on telecommunications, and Chris has used and written about iPhones, BlackBerry phones, Android phones, and many others. Chris writes for a variety of technology magazines and Web sites, including Fast Company. He was an early adopter of GrandCentral, predecessor to Google Voice, using it to fend off — uh, that is, better communicate with — the legions of PR people that magazine editors are in constant communication with. He’s written two books about iPhone application development. He is completing a Master of Arts degree in journalism from Harvard University.

Dedication

We would like to dedicate this book to our families, who have been endlessly supportive as we spent equally endless hours intently studying (okay, playing with) the latest and greatest phone technology in our quest to better understand Google Voice and its place in the future of telecommunications.

Authors’ Acknowledgments

Katie Mohr and Tiffany Ma, our acquisitions editors, had the vision to support us in beginning this project within days of the announcement of Google Voice and the patience to see it through many changes and new developments to launch. Beth Taylor, our project editor, patiently shepherded the manuscript through revisions and updates. Lynne Johnson, our technical editor, brought both depth and breadth of experience as well as a long-time Android fan’s perspective to our work. Mary Bednarek, executive acquisitions editor, lent help and encouragement at important junctures.

Publisher’s Acknowledgments

We’re proud of this book; please send us your comments through our online registration form located at http://dummies.custhelp.com. For other comments, please contact our Customer Care Department within the U.S. at 877-762-2974, outside the U.S. at 317-572-3993, or fax 317-572-4002.

Some of the people who helped bring this book to market include the following:

Acquisitions, Editorial, and Media Development

Project Editor: Beth Taylor

Acquisitions Editors: Katie Mohr, Tiffany Ma

Copy Editor: Beth Taylor

Technical Editor: Lynne d. James

Editorial Manager: Jodi Jensen

Editorial Assistant: Amanda Graham

Sr. Editorial Assistant: Cherie Case

Cartoons: Rich Tennant (www.the5thwave.com)

Composition Services

Project Coordinator: Kristie Rees

Layout and Graphics: Ana Carrillo, Christine Williams

Proofreader: Christopher M. Jones

Indexer: Potomac Indexing, LLC

Publishing and Editorial for Technology Dummies

Richard Swadley, Vice President and Executive Group Publisher

Andy Cummings, Vice President and Publisher

Mary Bednarek, Executive Acquisitions Director

Mary C. Corder, Editorial Director

Publishing for Consumer Dummies

Diane Graves Steele, Vice President and Publisher

Composition Services

Debbie Stailey, Director of Composition Services

Foreword

A few years ago, we looked at all the phones in our own lives and discovered things had become quite complicated: one for the office, another at home, a cell phone (maybe even two) for taking calls on the run. We had to remember a different number for each device, and so did our friends, family, and co-workers. We missed important calls whenever we stepped away from the desk or forgot a cell phone at home, and checking voicemail on all those phones proved more trouble than it was worth. We rarely listened to voice messages, and when we did, it was only to delete them.

The idea for GrandCentral, which later became Google Voice, was born out of our own frustrations. We worked on web-based technologies before and quickly realized the Internet could help everyone gain more control over their phones and communications. We eventually organized the product around a single phone number that links all of your phones together, a single voicemail box that is accessible from any of those phones with all of your messages saved online, and many features we all wished for, like voicemail transcription and a phone spam filter to keep unwanted callers away.

Today, the Google Voice team remains focused on making your communications better and we will continue developing new features that give you more control over how you communicate. We hope you enjoy exploring Google Voice through this book and thank you for using the service

Craig Walker and Vincent Paquet

Google Voice

Introduction

Google Voice may be one of those rare trifectas — a product that’s truly new, truly important, and immediately recognized as such from the time it first appears. Why might this be?

Google Voice combines three of the most important trends of our time: the increasing power of our computers; the even faster-growing power of cell phones and smartphones; and the meteoric rise of Google to become the world’s leading Internet innovator.

Google Voice brings all this energy together in a product that’s free, easy to use, and available to anyone in the United States. If you have at least one phone and at least occasional access to a computer, then you can find immediate benefit in Google Voice. People with multiple phones and a lot of contacts — journalists, bloggers, salespeople, and savvy PR pros — are among the first to adopt it. Hundreds of thousands more are expected to follow.

Google Voice is simply a layer on top of the tools you already use, yet allows these tools to do much more than they did before. It’s still unknown, of course, just how much of a difference it will make over time, but its status as one of the most important new offerings of recent years has been acclaimed by newspapers, magazines, and the technorati alike.

But what about you, the new Google Voice user? Although it’s easy to get some superficial use out of Google Voice, it’s a deep product. To really take advantage of it means changing some existing habits and reorganizing the way you communicate. It also requires you to learn a few other new tools, such as dialer apps that run on smartphones. Luckily, all this work is likely to pay off handsomely. Effort you put into Google Voice today will pay off for a long time to come.

So enjoy the time you spend learning your way around Google Voice, and use this book to guide your experimentation with it. Google Voice is exciting and will change the world, at least a bit. You should have some fun as you learn to use it to its utmost capabilities.

About This Book

It’s about one of the most exciting products around — and it’s about 360 pages long.

What do you find in these pages? The best and most in-depth guide to using Google Voice around. You learn how to thoroughly integrate Google Voice into your daily life and work. We show you how to use Google Voice along with the cell phones, land line phones, and computer(s) you already have and use every day, and how to shop for new gear that works best with your new Google Voice communication style.

We go beyond Google Voice itself to show you how it can best be used in organizations large and small, and how to get the most out of dialers that run on the leading smartphones from Apple, RIM BlackBerry, and manufacturers who use Google’s Android mobile operating system. We even discuss etiquette for the best use of Google Voice in your work and personal life.

Foolish Assumptions

We’ve done our best to cram this book with information and insights, but almost no one will read it all the way through save our long-suffering editors. That’s because you are likely to discover some of the functionality of Google Voice on your own or from friends and colleagues before, during and after the time you spend reading this book.

You’re likely to need the chapter on one smartphone, but not all the chapters on all the smartphones we discuss. You may decide that you need to start with the chapter on Google Voice etiquette or that you never need it, and could have written a better guide to the topic yourself.

What do you need to use this book? A smartphone is enough, or a phone of any type and access to a computer. The more phones you’re responsible for — whether that’s just your own phones or also those of friends, family or coworkers — the more widely you’ll use what you learn here. Even a single phone, though, can be used better if you know how to get the most out of Google Voice in managing it.

You do need to be an experienced user of the Web and an experienced user of your phone so you can change settings. If you’re not super Web-savvy, don’t worry — we talk you through everything. This book can save you time and prevent common mistakes, but Google Voice isn’t rocket science.

tip.eps The figures in this book show up-to-date Windows screen shots for a consistent appearance. Being Web-based, though, the instructions and steps in this book work equally well for Windows, the Macintosh, a netbook, or a smartphone — almost any device that can run a Web browser.

Conventions Used in This Book

The conventions in this book are standard ways of communicating specific types of information, such as instructions and steps. (One example of a convention is the use of italics for newly introduced words that are then defined — as with the word “conventions” in the first sentence of this paragraph.)

Here are the conventions for this book:

New terms are printed in italics, and then defined shortly afterward.

Information used in specific ways is formatted in a specific typeface. In this book, one of the most common kinds of information displayed this way is Web addresses; that is, text you enter into the address bar of a Web browser to visit a specific Web site or Web page. Web addresses appear in special text like this: www.dummies.com.

Google Voice is fast-paced and evolving, as are the Web sites that support it and describe it, and the products, such as dialers, that work with it. By the time you read this book, some of the product names and URLs listed in it may have changed. For updates, please visit our blog at www.gvdaily.com.

Representative browser versions appear among the figures.

Related, brief pieces of information are displayed in bulleted lists, such as the bulleted list that you’re reading right now.

Numbered lists are used for instructions that you must follow in a particular sequence. This book has many sequential steps that tell you just how to perform the different tasks that, when taken together, can make you a successful Web author.

How This Book Is Organized

We began this book very soon after Google Voice was announced, before it was available to anyone outside Google and a few ladies and gentlemen of the press and early adopters. We finished it just a few months later, which is breakneck speed for a major book project about such a new product. During that time some things in the real world and our understanding of how to get the most out of Google Voice both evolved.

So things changed along the way. And we began, and will continue to maintain, a blog at www.gvDaily.com to help describe and help you with any changes that occur after this book goes to print.

Part I: Setting up Google Voice

If you set up a mousetrap correctly, you end up minus a bit of cheese and plus a trapped mouse. It’s the same with Google Voice. If you make a strong beginning with it, you get results without a lot of additional effort. We devote Part I to showing you all the things that people who don’t have this book may trip over in setting up Google Voice.

Part II: Maximizing Your Voice

Google Voice has four layers of settings — for your phones, for individual callers, for groups of callers and for all callers as a whole. It can be controlled live from a phone before or during a call, from any Web-enabled phone, from a smartphone and from a Web browser. Getting the most out of all these settings takes some doing, but don’t be intimidated. We make it easy for you to get the most out of Google Voice, and to save time and money as you do so.

Part III: Maximizing Your Handset

If you have a cell phone, no matter what kind it is, Google Voice will help you get the most out of it. We plumb the mysteries of the Google Voice Mobile site and Google Voice dialer apps for iPhone, Android phones, and BlackBerry phones to help you become a savvy, capable power user in very little time.

Part IV: Playing Well with Others

Google Voice works well with Gmail, other Google Apps offerings and even a third party tool, Gizmo5. It also “plays well” in small business and the enterprise. We show you how to get all these players operating as a team.

Part V: The Part of Tens

You only get one chance to make a first impression, and that’s as true in your use of Google Voice as it is anywhere else in life. Our Part of Tens chapters show you how to use the emerging etiquette for Google Voice to make it a positive for all those you come into contact with.

Icons Used in This Book

remember.eps Marks information that you need to keep in mind as you work.

technicalstuff.eps Points to things you may want to know but don’t necessarily need to know. You can skip these and read the text, skip the text and read these, or go ahead and read both.

tip.eps Flags specific information that may not fit in a step or description but that helps you create better Web pages.

warning_bomb.eps Points out anything that may cause a problem.

savetime.eps Using Google Voice can save you a great deal of time. This icon highlights information that will help you save time.

savemoney.eps Using Google Voice can also save you a great deal of money. This icon highlights information that will help you save money.

Part I

Setting Up Google Voice

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In this part . . .

Google Voice changes and improves the way your phones work for you. Here we show you how to get it set up right the first time, including how to save time and money with Google Voice.

Chapter 1

A Day in Your Google Voice Life

In This Chapter

Discovering what Google Voice can do

Using Google Voice in the morning

Getting through the workday with Google Voice

Using Google Voice at home

Understanding the bottom line

Google Voice is a marvelous mashup — all the power and control we associate with computers at their best, combined with the warmth, spontaneity, and flexibility of talking to other people. Although you need to spend some time figuring out how to get the most out of Google Voice, the service can ultimately simplify your life.

Google Voice is not only powerful and capable in its own right, but it works alongside other Google services. You can get a lot out of it for personal use, and take it even further in a business context.

Google Voice is not to be confused with Google’s Voice Search, which allows you to search the Internet by speaking words out loud; nor with Google Talk, a service for using a computer directly for text messaging and computer-to-computer voice conversations. Both of these are valuable services, but they don’t overlap with Google Voice, which allows you to fuse all your telephone lines into one central, Web-accessible hub.

Google Voice helps you manage real live phones, with all the voice quality and convenience that only a telephone has, along with voicemail for all of them. Unlike Voice over Internet Protocol (VOIP) services, Google Voice lets you add the convenience of the Web while preserving the voice quality and convenience that only a telephone can offer.

And Google Voice saves you time, money, and hassle. Anyone can improve their life with Google Voice — while businesses can do even more, by cutting costs and adding services in a way that can not only reduce expenses, but really move the needle on what a business can offer customers.

Discovering Google Voice

Google Voice reduces the cost of calls, making national calls free and international ones much cheaper — perhaps a tenth the cost of a direct-dialed cell phone call. And Google Voice notifies you of voicemail messages and allows you to record phone calls, so that you can manage conversations as well as the phones themselves.

Here’s how it works: Google Voice gives you a single, virtual phone number, from almost any area code in the U.S. that you’d like. That number, in turn, can ring any or all of your other phone lines — your work phone, cell phone, and so on, meaning that you can be reached with just one number.

Google Voice also changes the way you can handle calls. Like any phone service, it records voicemail messages. And it sends you notification that a voicemail message is waiting.

You can also screen callers and listen in on voicemail messages before deciding whether to pick up the call, just like an old-fashioned answering machine. And it lets you block callers, send certain numbers straight to voicemail, and set up custom mailbox greetings for discrete callers. You can record calls on the fly, send and receive SMS text messages, and keep your entire call history online.

All of these capabilities were part of GrandCentral, the service that Google bought in 2007 and made the foundation for Google Voice. Google Voice adds several new capabilities.

One is support for text messaging, or SMS, from your GrandCentral phone number. This feature was missing in GrandCentral but is added in Google Voice, making the service much more seamless to use. Figure 1-1 shows the SMS interface, new with Google Voice.

A wonderful bonus, though, is very inexpensive international calls — a few cents a minute to most countries, instead of ten or more cents, or even the better part of a dollar, per minute from different land line and cell phone plans.

But it also allows you to access your voicemail messages and listen to them online. You can forward a message to a friend or embed it in a Web site. Most amazingly, Google Voice transcribes your voicemail messages instantly — not perfectly, but surprisingly well, in most cases — so that you can read them on-screen, in your e-mail inbox, or as a text message. So if you’re staying in touch by e-mail, as more and more people do these days, you don’t have to leave text mode to stay in touch with, manage, and respond to your voice messages.

Google Voice also supports conference calls and call merging, so you can easily (and cheaply) plan a conference call. You can also spontaneously expand a typical two-person call to include more people. This is a major improvement for all of us who have not been able to make a conference call happen when we badly needed one. Google Voice also lets you switch an incoming call from one phone to another without hanging up and redialing and to record part or all of an incoming call.

Figure 1-1: Google Voice keeps you from making an SMS of things.

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Google Voice is potentially useful for anyone, but it offers an additional level of ease and utility when used with a smartphone. Google Voice-specific applications are also already available for iPhone and Google Android.

There’s much more, as we describe throughout this book. But you can already see that Google Voice can make a big difference in how — and how effectively — you can use your phones.

Waking Up with Google Voice

Let’s begin with a typical workday as it might unfold for you using Google Voice. Google Voice makes you more capable and accessible with regard to work, yet at the same time better able to protect your personal life and personal time.

Even if you don’t work, much of the following applies to attending school, volunteering, keeping up with friends — anything that you do in groups. (And all things that you have more time for if you’re not working.)

It’s 6:20 a.m., and 10 minutes before your alarm goes off, your cell phone rings. Normally you would have no choice but to answer — what if it’s important?

But with Google Voice in place, you know that the person must be important if the phone is even ringing, because you’ve sent all nonessential callers straight to voicemail for the night. Still, you let the call ring through to voicemail. It gets picked up by Google Voice, and you listen in to the message as it is being left. You hear that it’s a message from a work colleague about the commute being crowded — something you need to know, but not a call you absolutely have to answer.

You’re in control. In this case, you pick up the call as the message is finishing up so that you can thank your friend. But you could have just let it go if you wanted. You have the information you needed, and your blood pressure stayed low throughout.

You get up and get ready for work quickly. As you shower and eat your breakfast, you turn off the ringer on your cell phone, but both e-mail and voicemail messages show up onscreen in your e-mail inbox. (Figure 1-2 shows a transcribed voicemail message in Google Voice.) So you can glance at any messages shortly after they come in and respond to anything urgent.

You’ve planned a quick call to an overseas colleague before you leave for work, catching them at the end of their workday. In the past, you might have had to get to the office extra early to place the call, because it would be cheaper to make and appear on your employer’s bill, not yours. But with Google Voice, the call is so cheap that you can make a quick call without worrying about the cost.

Figure 1-2: Google Voice takes a message for you.

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You call into Google Voice from your home phone instead of your cell phone, because the cellular connection can get a bit weak where you live. Then you dial through to your colleagues, at just a few cents a minute, and get through your business. But the call goes a bit long and you switch it to your cell phone, without interruption, to say your goodbyes as you grab your coat and head out the door toward work.

At Work with Google Voice

On the drive to work, you dutifully wear your hands-free headset and listen as a couple of calls come in, but you don’t answer; you just listen to the messages being left, knowing you can cut in if you have to, but otherwise deferring most of your responses until you get to the office. You’re less tense than usual, because the ringing of the phone doesn’t compel an immediate response on your part.

You get to the office on time. At work, you open the two e-mailed voice message transcriptions from Google Voice and send e-mails in response. Before a meeting, you open up Google Voice on your computer and block your personal contacts, sending their calls to voicemail (supported, of course, by e-mail transcriptions, so you can respond if anything urgent comes up).

At work, you receive an important call on your Google Voice number and then use Google Voice to record part of it. Google Voice automatically notifies the other party with a verbal message. You’re able to concentrate fully on the call, with no need to take notes as a record. At the end of the call, you easily conference in your boss, despite that she is on the road, to add a few final words.

After the call is over, you forward the recording to the other party by e-mail (a practice that takes any possible tinge of rudeness out of recording someone on the phone). You then embed the recording in a blog post in your company’s internal blog, so others can listen to and learn from it.

Throughout the day, you and your colleagues use Google Voice to flexibly manage calling groups for calls to individuals who are away from their desks or to the department as a whole. Many routine calls from vendors are automatically routed to voicemail or to other associates.

With Google Voice, it’s much less important to be at your desk. Calls to your Google Voice number can go to both your desk phone and your cell phone, so you can use whichever one is handier. When you are away from your desk, a smartphone interface allows you to make and manage calls easily through the company’s Google Voice account, saving you hassle and the company a lot of money while keeping control. Figure 1-3 shows an Android interface for Google Voice of a type that many organizations are likely to be using.

Figure 1-3: Use Google Voice to put home on the back burner for a while.

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Whether at your desk or on the move, using the phone in a conference room or your cell phone, you no longer need to worry over the cost of long calls to faraway colleagues. For international calls, you only pay a few cents per minute. And you pay the same rates on your cell phone — which is more convenient, but uses minutes from your plan — or from a desk phone. You can even use any handy land line without worrying that you’re putting charges on someone else’s bill.

Relaxing at Home with Google Voice

At home, the most exciting thing that Google Voice makes possible is what doesn’t happen.

You don’t get any nasty surprises on your home phone voicemail that you missed a package delivery, or missed a plumber’s appointment, or missed your last chance to pay your credit card bill without a penalty. You’ve received any such voicemail messages during the day, as both e-mail transcripts and as actual voice messages you can pick up from any Web browser or phone. And you’ve been able to deal with any occasional mini-crisis before it becomes a real one.

You don’t get any calls during dinner, whether by yourself or with your family, because you can block all calls and leave a message that you’d be available later that evening. Figure 1-4 shows the Google Voice screen you use to make this happen quickly.

Figure 1-4: Use Google Voice to protect “home” from “phone” for a while.

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And you don’t get any sales calls, ever, because numbers from unknown callers don’t ring your home phone anymore. They get sent straight to Google Voice’s voicemail-with-e-mail-notification, so you can respond to any calls you actually want within a reasonable time and never have to bother with the rest. (Or, leave your phone open to calls but rely on Google Voice’s telemarketer database to screen out the vast majority of sales calls.)

By using Google Voice, you can go to bed early without the phone ringing, watch a movie without interruption, or stay up late making cheap, Google Voice-enabled calls to friends, family members or work colleagues in various time zones around the world.

Grasping the Bottom Line

In the next few chapters, we show you how to get the most out of Google Voice. Managing phones from a computer interface is new to everyone, so there’s going to be some cogitation involved, and it may take some practice.

So it’s worth reflecting a bit on the benefits that Google Voice brings as inspiration for the effort you need to put in to really master it and make it your friend.

Saving time and reducing stress

With Google Voice, your phones ring less. Until Google Voice, your phones owned you — the very first ring of a phone was something you had to deal with right then and there. But Google Voice gives you so much control: allowing you to block calls, let a call roll through to voicemail — then answer it if needed — and more. Your phone rings less, and you’re in control when it does.

Most of the early adopters of Google Voice are likely to be people with lots of phones to worry about. Google Voice cuts down on the relay game you play with friends and family. But its stress-reducing qualities shine through even if you only have a single landline phone plopped in the middle of your living room (or, as more and more people do, a single cell phone always near you).

How does it really save time, though? It’s a question of attention. Before, each call and voicemail message commanded the same amount of attention, because you never knew the content of the call in advance. Now you can prioritize calls and voicemails the same way you do other forms of communication, such as e-mail and printed mail, which you can judge by a brief glance. That’s why people have switched so much of their communications to e-mail from the phone; it’s easier for our brains to filter by reading than by listening. Google Voice allows the achievement of a happy medium between e-mail-centric and voice-centric communication, each of which has its advantages.

Saving money

Today, overseas calls can cost several dollars even for a few minutes, especially from your cell phone. Even long-distance U.S. calls can add up. You either have to force a call to be shorter than it should be, or grin and bear the cost.

Conference calls are hard to set up, subject to hard and fast trunk line availability and time limits, and often very expensive indeed.

Calls home to loved ones while on a business trip can be very expensive, either burning a hole in your pocket or prompting quizzical questions from your boss — or his or her boss. And juggling time zones against access to cheaper calling opportunities is a nightmare.

Skype, Google Talk, and similar computer-supported calling services have made a dent in phone costs. But they lack the call quality and reliability of landline phones and the flexibility of mobile phones. Privacy is harder as well. (How many intensely private phone calls get made in Internet cafes and other public places to save money?)

Google Voice really gives you the best of the computer and the phone. You can make calls where you want to, when you want to, with exponentially less worry about cost. This aspect of Google Voice will improve many people’s lives.

Gaining control

“Power to the people” was a popular theme of the flower children back in the 1960s. Google Voice, like a lot of other Internet-based technology, makes it a reality.

Although getting a grasp on all of the features takes some work, it’s also really cool to be able to control what happens with your phones. And, beyond the personal level, it’s even cooler to be able to control how groups of phones interact with groups of people. A few years ago, there was a lot of talk about PDAs — Personal Digital Assistants. Google Voice makes not only your own phones, but all the phones around you into little helpers that can accept some calls and push off the rest to another phone or voicemail (with e-mail accompaniment).

It may take years for the practice of phone management through Google Voice to catch up with so much that’s new — the possibilities that Google Voice itself, smart phone interfaces, other add-on products and future improvements in all of the above will make possible. Some of Google Voice’s capabilities and cost savings are likely to work their way into competing products as well, so the environment will change for everyone, Google Voice users or not. But the end result will be phones that do what people want them to do, rather than phones that make people do unneeded work.

Google Voice is going to change the way you and everyone else uses phones. So you’ve made a smart choice by adopting Google Voice, and by investing in this book to get the most out of it. You can start getting the benefits right away — you can save hassle, time, and money, while gaining control and getting out in front of a technology that may change all our lives.