News
BT launches 'Voice Continuity' - New service safeguards voice networks in emergency situations
London, England. February 2008
BT today announced the launch of Voice Continuity, a new family of business continuity services, designed to keep voice networks running in case of a disaster situation. The solutions ensure that in any circumstances, calls to employees will always be delivered, no matter where they may be located - such as another office, a disaster recovery site or to a mobile phone.
The service covers regular telephone calls, faxes and data calls. It is possible to pre-arrange up to five different diversion plans which can be instantly selected depending on which is most appropriate in any given situation. Uniquely, the service includes the ability for authorised staff to override the current diversion plan and 'pull' calls to their current location.
In the event of an emergency, the service can be activated by making a telephone call to the service help desk. Once activated, all incoming calls can be immediately routed to an announcement service, where they are handled automatically whilst staff are evacuated from the affected location.
Ray Stanton, global head of BT's business continuity, security and governance practice, said: “Most organisations have for a long time meticulously planned disaster recovery strategies for their data, network and business applications. In the event of an emergency though, the most vital network to maintain is the voice one. Failure to plan for this creates a major hole in any business continuity plan. This service has been designed specifically to address that gap.”
“Business continuity should not be viewed as a box-ticking exercise. It's about protecting revenue and reputation. In today's fast-paced economy, companies cannot afford to be out of reach from their customers and key stakeholders for long. The very real fear should be, "If I'm not working, is someone going to take my business and clients?"
Unlike most continuity services, in the event of an emergency, Voice Continuity can automatically route to a secondary location by testing each incoming call and determining how it should be delivered.
During normal operation, calls will be delivered to the users' voice network in the normal way, without any change to call-flow. However, should the service detect a failure in either the local exchange, the connection to the exchange, or the connection to an organisation's internal voice network, the service automatically routes incoming calls to the preferred secondary location.
Organisation's have a number of options for diverting calls including mobile phones, home phones or even international offices. In this way, the BT solution ensures that incoming calls can continue to flow without the need for manual intervention.
Further details can be found at www.btvoicecontinuity.com
Notes to editors
BT Voice Continuity is a family of network delivered continuity services, suitable for small and large organisations providing ultimate flexibility during a crisis. The service protects a businesses revenue and reputation by delivering voice, fax and data calls, device driver interface by device driver interface (DDI by DDI), to alternate numbers or services in the event of any disruption.
Benefits at a glance
- Delivers voice, fax and data calls DDI by DDI to the intended recipient rather than to an operator
- Automatic failover to a secondary location to route calls onto the private network
- Securely and simply controlled from any telephone handset by authorised staff
- Diversion Plans can be invoked from any location via telephone with the press of a button
- Personal override for staff unable to reach their designated emergency location
- Supports unlimited DDI numbers
- Available 24x365
- No need for dedicated equipment in the Local Exchange, no CAPEX, no software to install, no additional lines
About BT
BT is one of the world's leading providers of communications solutions and services operating in 170 countries. Its principal activities include networked IT services; local, national and international telecommunications services; higher-value broadband and internet products and services and converged fixed/mobile products and services. BT consists principally of four lines of business: BT Global Services, Openreach, BT Retail and BT Wholesale.
In the year ended 31 March 2007, BT Group plc's revenue was £20,223 million with profit before taxation of £2,484 million. British Telecommunications plc (BT) is a wholly-owned subsidiary of BT Group and encompasses virtually all businesses and assets of the BT Group. BT Group plc is listed on stock exchanges in London and New York. For more information, visit www.bt.com/aboutbt
About Teamphone Ltd
Teamphone are a European market leader in deploying next generation voice services across any network. Over 250,000 subscribers use SmartNumbers across 5,000 major corporations for solutions including Flexible Working, Business Continuity, Virtual Call Centre and Premium Customer Service.
Organisations such as the UK Ministry of Defence, Barclays Bank, BT, Prudential, Lloyds TSB, Regus and many others rely upon SmartNumbers for business-class telephony solutions. More information can be found at www.btsmartnumbers.com and www.teamphone.com
— Ray Stanton, global head of BT's business continuityIn the event of an emergency, the most vital network to maintain is the voice one
Need Voice Continuity?
- Watch the 5 minute Voice Continuity Directed Recovery demonstration
- Find out more about our Business Continuity solutions

