I dunno about you, but I've long dreaded wading into the whole long-distance phone thing. I mean, who needs that kind of headache? Given the options availablemost of which couldn't be any more unintelligible if they were written in SanskritI've always found it easier to just go with the flow even if it's to my financial detriment. You won't hear me say that very often.
The one financial services company I really trust in the world, USAA, partnered with Sprint a long time ago, so I kind of just jumped on that bandwagon and enjoyed the 10 percent off perk that USAA membership got me.
Through the years Sprint's been a pretty marginal deal on long-distance, but certainly they've been as good or better than AT&T or MCI. Sprint's two competing plans appropriate for us were these:
- If you make more than $20 a month in long distance calls, you can viably use a plan where you pay $5.95 a month and get 5 cents a minute for off-peak calls. On-peak calls are 10 cents a minute.
- If you don't usually make that many calls, there's a 24/7 "international" calling plan at 11 cents a minute. That's the one we've been on, so at least we've not had to worry about when we're calling. Still, this is no bargain, even with a USAA knocking it down to 10 cents a minute.
Yesterday, I decided to take the bull by the horns and find a better deal. I signed up with OneSuite.com. Here's how it works: You sign up on their secure web site and authorize a $10 to $50 charge on your Visa card. That gives you a bank of minutes from which to draw when you want to call long distance. Then, to call somebody long distance, you dial OneSuite's toll-free 800 access number from any phone (including cell phones) in the US, punch in your access code, and dial the number you want. The charge? A measly 2.9 cents per minute. Their international rates are also excellent (4.5 cents a minute to France, Germany and the UK, for example.)
Now all those numbers for dialing add up to a lot of digits, so OneSuite makes it possible to set up what are called "ZipDial" phones. These are phones which you've previously authorized online. They're given automatic access to OneSuite's network when you use them. That means you don't have to punch in your access code after you dial the 800 number. For example, my home phone is set up as a ZipDial phone, and I've pre-programmed the OneSuite 800 number into the speed dial. So for a long distance call all I have to do now is hit the speed dial and dial the long distance number I'm calling.
When I need more minutes, I just go to their web site and re-charge my Visa with another $10 to $50 increment of my choice. It's pretty simple.
I used the service for the first time yesterday, talking with my friend Garr in Portland for 69 minutes. Under the old Sprint plan that would've cost $7.59. With OneSuite, it was $2a savings of $5.59 on one call. And the line quality was fine in case anyone's curious. OneSuite buys blocks of time from one of majors (Sprint, AT&T, MCI) and uses it for their calls.
Now Erin and I have been notoriously poor about staying in touch with people via phone, and I'm being frank when I say that I don't know if this will turn the tide. But as we grow older I think we all increasingly see the value of connections with friends and family, and I've got to think that anything that helps in that regard is a good thing. Check them out and see what you think.