In today's fast-paced business environment, work can't stop because employees are away from the office. A major obstacle many companies face is submitting contracts or other documents by a certain deadline when the parties involved are traveling. The National Football League is in the middle of its offseason, which means many players are signing new contracts. It's a good time to remember a faxing fiasco that seriously impacted multiple parties last spring. Elvis Dumervil, he was away from Colorado and tried faxing in his new contract. His connection was too slow, unfortunately, and his documents were received six minutes after the deadline. The Broncos cut him and he became a free agent, eventually signing with another team.
Deals can be made or broken in a matter of minutes, and companies are realizing the benefit of technologies that work with just an Internet connection so long stretches traveling won't stop progress, even if that means sending fax information while on a plane. Forty percent of U.S. airplanes have some amount of Wi-Fi on board, and the number of commercial planes worldwide with an Internet connection, cell service or both is expected to more than triple in the next 10 years.
With fax over IP used for plane communication, businesses can make deals and send contracts, even at 38,000 feet. With only an Internet connection, users can transmit and receive faxes via email, allowing work to continue on schedule. Business users can read and approve documents on a mobile device and then print them once it's convenient. Because the original message arrived in an email, it can be archived or forwarded easily.
With FaxCore's etherFax service, messages are sent through a secure data center and then routed to a company's specific, unique number. All faxes, sent and received, are stored in a businesses personal FaxCore server so data is kept secure and private.
Enhance enterprise communication, collaboration and compliance efforts with a proven FoIP solution from FaxCore. Contact FaxCore today to learn more about their 'Partly-Cloudy' fax solutions.