The new Google Voice service juggles several telephone tricks, picking up where Google-acquired GrandCentral left off. Google Voice routes incoming calls to several phones simultaneously, dials numbers from the PC interface, includes web-accessible voicemail, and more. The biggest new feature transcribes voice messages so you can read them as SMS or email. All together, it’s a great option for businesses with mobile needs, letting clients reach you wherever you are by dialing a single number.
While initially available only to current GrandCentral users, I’m relieved that Google is finally releasing an update. I’ve used the free GrandCentral for the mobility features, but especially for call recording options; the service has languished for two years, making me begin plans to move to another tool. (PhoneFusion looks like a close competitor, giving more routing options for multiple employees while coming with a $10-30 monthly fee.)
Google hasn’t commented on new pricing, my final concern for business use. I’d actually rather pay a monthly fee than dabble with a not-ready-for-prime-time “beta” service. I’d also hope that cost would turn off any content-specific ads based on my voicemail. (The company hasn’t commented on ads either, but those contextual ads seem likely since they appear everywhere else on Google.)
Google Voice seems close to matching my business needs. It even taps into an established Gmail contact list. But if it still can’t deliver, PhoneFusion and other competitors are waiting.
Zack Stern is a freelance writer and editor based in San Francisco who will tell you if he’s recording a call.