How To Get Short-Term Cell Phone Service For Your Business
Business owners are tired of paying for cell phone service year round when their business needs vary. They are frustrated when they have to sign a long-term contract for mobile phones that may be intermittently in use. Business owners are looking for solutions for their changing needs depending on the time of year, weather or the economy. There is no need to sign a cell phone service contract in order to have cell phone plans.
The solution to save money is simple. Go to WirelessWithout.com and use a cell phone plan from Sprint, AT&T, Alltel, Unicel, or Verizon. There are no activation fees, no start up fees and no termination fees of any kind. Customers can change their cell phone plan, change their wireless provider, or change their mind with no activation fees, no termination fees and no suspension fees, ever. These plans are not prepaid cell phone plans but rather the same plans available from major wireless providers with a contract.
Small or large businesses are charged the same usage rates as they would pay the provider directly for service. There is never an obligation to continue service or sign a cell phone contract and customers can stop or start one or all of their wireless lines at anytime with no penalties and no early termination fees.
Compare this to signing a contract with a service provider with a guarantee your company will be charged for monthly service regardless if the cell phone is in use. To terminate the contract, cell phone companies will charge an early termination fee per line.
For more information about wireless plan options, you can visit their website at WirelessWithout.com
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Help answer the question about compare cell phone plans
what is your current prepaid cell phone plan?i'm trying to find out if there are better prepaid plans currently. i have one right now, but i think it's expnsive.
so please list your current plan for me to compare. thanks.
Here's a simple example. I'm going to ignore text messaging and mobile web prices because I don't know how complicated you want it to be.
I'm just going to assume there is a monthly charge (no matter how many minutes you use) and a charge per minute for the amount of minutes that you go over your allowed minutes.
Let's say plan A is 39.99/month for 500 minutes, and then it is $0.65 per minute after you use the 500 minutes.
Let's say plan B is $34.99/month for 450 minutes, and then it is $0.60 per minute after the 450 minutes.
Let x = number of minutes you use each month.
The cost of plan A would be
C = 39.99 if you use less than 500 minutes or
C = 39.99 + 0.65(x-500) if you use 500 minutes or more.
The cost of plan B would be
C = 34.99 if you use less than 450 minutes or
C = 34.99 + 0.60(x-450) if you use more than 450 minutes.
Right away you can see that Plan B is cheaper if you don't use more than 450 minutes.
You can find when the plans cost the same amount by setting the cost of each plan equal to each other.
39.99 + 0.65(x-500) = 34.99 +0.60(x-450)
Then solve for x.
http://www.phonescoop.com has every cell phone from every wireless provider available. Hope this helps!
Here are some things to consider that will make the process of comparing prepaid plans an easy one:
1. Price per minute – prepaid cell phones minutes cost between 10 cents and 60 cents. That's a huge range. With some prepaid providers you buy a bucket of minutes, and the more you buy at one time, the less per minute cost.
With others you put dollar amounts on your phone. With more money you add, your number of minutes per dollar will increase. Long story short, the more you spend, the cheaper each individual minute will be.
2. Expiring minutes -This is really important. Once your minutes expire, you will lose them. If you use your cell phone often, this probably won't be an issue.
But, if you are buying a phone for emergency purposes or to use infrequently, you might want to spend more per minute for a later expiration date. Some carriers also make you add a certain amount of minutes or money per month in order to keep your account active.
3. Daily Fees -Some carriers charge a fee for each day your phone is used. This can be as high as $1.00 a day, but will come with lower per minute fees.
If you use your phone infrequently this might be a good deal for you. If you use your phone for many days a month, you will be paying too much, especially if it's for short call.
4. Nights and weekends/ mobile to mobile -Some plans offer free nights and weekends and some offer free calls to others with the same carrier.
Again, you might want to pay more per minute if you will be able to take advantage of these features.
5. Roaming charges – Some carriers have roaming charges and other have none. It is important to find out if there will be times that you will be roaming.
If you will be roaming frequently, you will want to avoid a carrier that has roaming fees. Some are up to 70 cents per minute.
6. International calling -Some prepaid plans offer it and some do not. If you need international calling capabilities you will want to be sure that the carrier you select offers this service. Finding the best plan can be a daunting task.
Be sure to sit down and write what your needs will be before shopping. If you know what your needs are for the above topics, you will be able to make an educated comparison of prepaid plans.
I just looked yesterday. Check out this site:
http://cnet.phonedog.com/cell-phone-research/compare-plans.aspx
hope it helps
Try MyRatePlan. At the source link below, you can compare single, family and/or prepaid plans.
You generally won't find discount codes for rate plans, although some corporations have discounts with specific carrier(s). Usually these come in the form of a percentage (e.g., 15%) off your monthly bill.
type that into a search
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