Many
people find that having and using phone cards for
long distance calling simply makes sense. Whether
you have employees who are sometimes out of the office
or kids away from home, phone cards can have many
practical uses.
If you provide calling cards for kids or employees
to get in touch with you, be sure you’re purchasing
from a reputable company. Some phone cards are notorious
for their busy signals. When you call in, you get a
recording that indicates the circuits are all busy
and that you should try your call again later. It’s
not going to do much good to page your employee only
to have him or her unable to get a line to call in
with the phone cards.
Think it’s going to be too much trouble for
your teen to keep up with a phone card? If he or she
can memorize the phone card number, parents can retain
the phone card and simply recharge it periodically
to be sure the teen has the ability to stay in touch.
If you’re consistently recharging the same phone
card, there’ll never be a need to learn more
than the one access number. If you’re planning
to do this, be sure that you purchase the phone card
from a reputable company that will be around for you
to continue recharging the card over a period of time.
For those who hang on to their phone cards themselves,
there are some real advantages. Some public phones
have the ability to read the cards, eliminating most
of the hassle of using pre-paid phone cards.
Another positive use for phone cards is home use.
If you have had trouble getting good long distance
phone service at a reasonable price, phone cards may
be the answer for several reasons. First, you pay as
you go. There’s never a gigantic long distance
phone bill to hit you at the end of the month. As long
as you put all your long distance phone calls on the
phone cards, you’ll be paying only for your basic
service. The downside is that you have to jump through
the hoops of dialing up the phone card number before
making your call.
Remember that phone calls made with phone cards are
going to give an unusual caller identification number
to the recipient. If you’re calling someone who
tends to not answer unless they know the caller, be
sure to let them know that you’re using phone
cards and that your home number won’t show up
on the caller ID.