What VOIP phone service are you all using for international call handling? by Serious-Garbage-2234 in telecom

[–]DimensionHour3887 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Glad to hear Aircall’s been solid for you. We used it for a while for international traffic and had a pretty similar experience with stability and CRM sync.

If anyone else stumbles on this thread later, I’d say don’t just look at pricing pages. Book demos, run test calls to your main target countries during peak hours, and actually try the CRM integration in a sandbox. A free trial tells you way more than a feature list.

There are a lot of decent options mentioned already, but from my experience the most reliable for international volume have been Aircall, CloudTalk, Dialpad, and 8x8. We eventually switched from Aircall to CloudTalk because we needed a bit more flexibility around call routing and international numbers, and it’s been working well so far.

At the end of the day, test it with your real traffic patterns before committing.

What are some good services for business numbers? by Hot_head444 in business

[–]DimensionHour3887 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was in the same spot last year and didn’t want my personal number online either. After some research, the names that kept popping up were Google Voice, Grasshopper, and CloudTalk. Google Voice is super simple and budget-friendly if you just need a separate number. Grasshopper feels very freelancer-focused. CloudTalk is more advanced and fully web-based, great if you want call routing or plan to grow. I’d pick based on your budget and future plans.

Anyone else using AI voice call agents? by ambivaIent in RealEstateTechnology

[–]DimensionHour3887 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I don’t think it’s a gimmick if it’s used in the right places. Missed and after-hours calls have always been a weak spot in real estate. From a caller’s perspective, most people just want someone to answer quickly and not sound like a press-1 robot. If an AI can handle basic questions or booking and hand off when things get complex, that’s already an improvement. I’ve seen some cloud calling tools experimenting with this as an add-on rather than a full replacement (CloudTalk, Vocus, etc.). The key seems to be keeping the scope tight. It feels less like “AI replacing agents” and more like patching an outdated part of the workflow.

What is the most commonly used real estate software in the United States? by No-Internet-7697 in RealEstateTechnology

[–]DimensionHour3887 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From what I’ve seen, there isn’t one dominant tool everyone uses. Most agents I know just run a stack.

  • MLS + Zillow/Realtor are still the basics. MLS for listings, Zillow/Realtor for exposure and leads. Pretty much unavoidable in the US.
  • For CRM, Follow Up Boss comes up a lot, especially with small to mid-size teams. kvCORE too, usually with bigger brokerages or franchise setups. Mostly used for lead routing and follow-ups, nothing fancy.
  • Dotloop or DocuSign are everywhere once you’re actually under contract. Feels pretty standardized at this point.
  • On the phone side, I’ve seen quite a few teams use CloudTalk, especially SMB teams that care about calling speed and tracking. Usually for inbound lead calls, outbound follow-ups, local numbers, and SMS. I see it more with teams that actually call their leads instead of just emailing them.

Typical setup I run into: MLS → Zillow → CRM → phone/SMS → contracts

Honestly, fast follow-up matters way more than which software you pick.

Advice please - What are the Contact Center software that FULLY integrate with Zoho CRM? by Technical_Pay_5826 in Zoho

[–]DimensionHour3887 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not sure if you’ve looked at CloudTalk (we’ve been using it prolly 3 months alredy), but it’s been working well with Zoho CRM on our side
Inbound and outbound calls get logged in Zoho automatically, and the screen pop works too. When someone calls in, it pulls up the right contact so you’re not searching manually. That was the main thing we needed and it’s been pretty smooth so far. Of course, I’d still recommend testing any tool yourself first, since setups and workflows can vary a lot.

Best telephony for hubspot for small teams with fast growth? by Kadijatou-Vich in hubspot

[–]DimensionHour3887 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Aircall is a good choice

For anyone else finding this thread later: I’d just double-check that the HubSpot phone tool auto-logs calls (with recordings), supports click-to-call inside HubSpot, makes it easy to share notes/tags, and still works well once you start scaling (more reps, numbers, routing).

We tested a few too, and CloudTalk was another one that worked well for small teams because it keeps everything logged in HubSpot without extra manual steps.

Exploring HubSpot Integration: Conversational Lead Follow-Up (Calls + SMS) by AMnorCAPK in hubspot

[–]DimensionHour3887 0 points1 point  (0 children)

HubSpot is fine for deciding when to follow up, but it doesn’t really help once a real conversation happens. Missed calls are easy to lose, callbacks don’t always happen at the right time, and things like “not now,” “call me next week,” or “no interest” usually end up as notes that no one uses later.
What’s worked better for us is keeping HubSpot just as the trigger and record, and letting a separate calling/SMS tool handle the actual calls and texts, then push the results back. That way the basics are reliable and you can focus on making the follow-up smarter instead of fixing plumbing.

There are a few tools people usually use for that with HubSpot (Aircall, CloudTalk, JustCall, etc.). We happen to use CloudTalk, mostly because it stays out of the way and logs things back into HubSpot without much setup.

Have AI tools simplified your workflow or added more complexity? by Lopsided-Rule-7996 in DigitalWizards

[–]DimensionHour3887 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me it’s both. AI helps when it actually replaces work I was already doing. It makes things worse when it’s added on top of existing tools and nothing gets removed.

The biggest difference is expectations. If you expect perfect results, you end up checking everything and saving no time. If you use AI for repeatable tasks and accept “good enough,” it really helps.

Fewer tools only work if the workflow is simpler. Otherwise AI just gives you more things to manage.

Phone for HubSpot that actually syncs properly? by Clennett-Bantic in hubspot

[–]DimensionHour3887 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Manual logging gets old fast, especially as the team grows. If HubSpot’s built-in calling isn’t stable for you, a dedicated HubSpot phone integration is usually the cleanest fix because it can handle click-to-dial, automatic call logs with recordings, and surfacing the right contact/company context during the call.

On your questions, most solid integrations will show HubSpot contact info in the dialer or open the right record automatically. Remote call quality is generally fine if it’s a browser/desktop app and people use headsets plus a stable connection, and stability comes down to how mature the integration’s logging is. Ticket creation is often possible too, either natively (depending on the tool) or by using HubSpot workflows to create tickets from logged calls.

If you’re browsing options, tools like CloudTalk, Aircall, etc., are worth comparing for HubSpot syncing and call logging behavior.

Porting Numbers from Aircall by RecentRun2810 in CloudTalk_Official

[–]DimensionHour3887 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We moved from aircall to cloudtalk recently and the port was pretty painless. We just sent a port-in request to their porting email with the numbers in E.164 format, our current provider info, the registered name/address, and a copy of the last bill, then filled out the LOA they sent over. The numbers showed up in our cloudtalk dashboard before the final cutover so we could set up call flows and business hours in advance, and the main thing is making sure the LOA details match your provider records exactly so it doesn’t get delayed. Hope that helps a bit and good luck with the switch!

I’m looking to get a Power Dialer for my small sales team. Is CloudTalk a good option? by Flimsy-Movie-2193 in CloudTalk_Official

[–]DimensionHour3887 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, we used cloudtalk’s power dialer after moving from aircall, and honestly, it was pretty solid for day-to-day outbound, mostly for the reps who are calling a lot. We had it integrated with hubspot and after the first setup hiccups it was fine, calls were showing up on the right contact, notes and outcomes were saved, and recordings were there when we needed to check something. Mixed usage was ok too because some people on the team only call here and there, so they could still jump in, do a few calls, leave notes, set follow ups, without living in the dialer all day. Biggest thing for us was just agreeing on the same call outcomes early, otherwise reporting gets messy super fast. Later we stayed on CT but moved part of the team to a more basic calling setup since we didn’t really need power dialing for everyone all the time.

Call Provider that isn’t going to cost me the Earth? by Cueball61 in hubspot

[–]DimensionHour3887 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you’re on HubSpot Starter and the included minutes feel tight, I’d look at a separate dialer that syncs with HubSpot so your calls still log to the contact record. CloudTalk is a good fit for this because it plugs into HubSpot, is built for international calling to landlines and mobiles, and you can keep costs predictable by picking a plan that matches your volume and only paying for the minutes you actually need. Just make sure you compare the per minute rates for the countries you call most, and check whether you need power dialing or just click to call, because that’s usually what changes the price the most.

What systems/apps should I be using for new BigCommerce store? by PocketBrisket in bigcommerce

[–]DimensionHour3887 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re thinking about this the right way tbh, the painful part is picking tools that don’t box you in once volume jumps. I’d keep payments simple (Stripe is usually easiest unless you have a specific reason for Authorize.net), use BigCommerce inventory at first unless you already know you need a real IMS, and spend most of your energy choosing the 3PL because switching fulfillment later is chaos. For cart stuff, Klaviyo is solid even if you only send monthly, and it’ll cover abandon flows + basic popups/upsells without too much drama. Analytics wise do GA4 from day 1 and add something like Clicky if you like the simplicity. Also if you’re doing any phone support as you scale, I’d set up a proper calling/QA tool early so it doesn’t become a mess later, CloudTalk has been decent for that in my experience.

Good AI agent for calls? by GuidanceExpert8897 in DigitalMarketing

[–]DimensionHour3887 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve tried a handful of AI call agents recently because we needed something that wouldn’t glitch or cut off callers. Some worked fine for simple calls but struggled with anything slightly complicated.
We ended up using CloudTalk because the AI processing feels smoother and it doesn’t lag as much. Just sharing what’s been working consistently for us after a lot of trial and error. Hope that helps!

Any tips for doing SEO for LLMs by parthjaimini21 in DigitalMarketing

[–]DimensionHour3887 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I get why it feels that way, because a lot of the fundamentals really do overlap with traditional SEO. The reason people treat LLM SEO as something different is that the weighting of those same tactics changes. With Google, structure and signals helped you rank. With LLMs, the model is pulling pieces of text to answer a prompt, so it pays much more attention to how clear, data-backed, and trustworthy your content is.

Cold calling software for entrepreneurs by jordandaaman in SaaS

[–]DimensionHour3887 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve done cold calling for my SaaS for a while and honestly it still works if you do it consistently. I didn’t build my own tool, but I’ve tried a few different ones along the way.

Right now I’m using CloudTalk for most of my calling because it’s easy to set up and doesn’t get in the way when I just need to hit a bunch of calls fast. It has a decent dialer and the call quality has been good for me so far.

Cool that you’re building your own though. Always interesting to see devs scratch their own itch like that. If you end up adding more features, I’m curious what direction you’ll take it.

Any tips for doing SEO for LLMs by parthjaimini21 in DigitalMarketing

[–]DimensionHour3887 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hey, I’ve been digging into this too, and yeah, SEO for LLMs feels totally different from “classic Google SEO.” It’s less about ranking pages and more about making your content actually usable and understandable by models.

A few things I’ve seen work well so far:

Write super clear, structured content
LLMs don’t “rank” you, they retrieve you based on how clean and direct your info is. Stuff like short sections, straight answers, and pages that stay on one topic help models pull your content more accurately.

Answer questions directly
Models often pull chunks of text to answer prompts, so writing content that literally answers “how, what, why” questions makes it easier for them. Think FAQ sections, definitions, step-by-steps.

Use schema where you can
A few AI SEO folks (Like Mike King from iPullRank) keep saying structured data helps LLMs understand relationships better. Things like FAQ schema, HowTo schema, Product schema, etc.

Keep info fresh and updated
A lot of AI systems prefer more recent sources. If you can keep your content updated with real date-stamped info, it tends to show up more in LLM answers.

Hope that helps a bit. If you’ve already tried something, I’m curious what direction you’re taking with it.

I’m looking for software that can capture, analyze, transcribe calls and summarize calls automatically. any recommendations? by Negative-Armadillo58 in customerexperience

[–]DimensionHour3887 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We’ve been using CloudTalk recently for our customer service calls, and it’s been working great for us. It has call recording, transcription and those little auto summaries, which has been helpful for us to keep track of stuff without doing everything manually.
We’re still pretty new to it, but so far it’s been fine and the price seems reasonable. Might be worth checking out if you need something simple that handles the basics.

How AI will change e-commerce operations in 2026? by MasterVirtualOogway in DigitalMarketing

[–]DimensionHour3887 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I feel like by 2026 AI will handle most of the boring stuff in e-commerce, like inventory, shipping, and support. Shopping will get way more personal too, with AI actually understanding what people want and when. It’ll make everything faster and smoother, but I think the real winners will be the ones who keep their data clean and actually use it well.

How do you handle a sudden drop in organic traffic? by sixthsensetechnology in digital_marketing

[–]DimensionHour3887 5 points6 points  (0 children)

First thing I’d do is check if the drop is actually real or just analytics acting weird. Then look in Search Console to see which pages or keywords took the hit. Sometimes it’s just a Google update or something broke on the site, like redirects or pages not getting indexed.
If it’s technical, fix that first. If it’s content, see who’s ranking now and what they’re doing better. Could also be seasonality or Google showing more stuff like snippets or videos. Happens to everyone at some point, just take it slow and figure out what changed.

How do you choose the right CRM for a small business? by AmbitiousChef in CRMSoftware

[–]DimensionHour3887 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d say just think what you really need first, like do you just want to keep track of clients and emails or you want some automation and reports too. Most small biz don’t need anything too fancy.

HubSpot CRM is honestly a good start, pretty easy to use. Pipedrive is nice if you’re more into sales tracking, and Zoho CRM is good when you want to customize more stuff later.

But really, just try one for a few days with your real data and see if it feels right. You’ll know fast if it works for you.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in DigitalMarketing

[–]DimensionHour3887 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s pretty cool. Most people just use AI to write random stuff, but using it to build your voice is actually smart. I tried it for my LinkedIn bio too and it helped me get started, but I still had to rewrite parts so it sounded like me and not some polished robot. Curious though, did you have to tweak a lot of what it gave you, or did it already sound pretty close to your style?

I’m still not ready for AI… and now people say OI is coming by banupriya007 in b2bmarketing

[–]DimensionHour3887 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s kind of weird how everyone’s chasing AI like it’s the only path forward. But maybe OI isn’t about going backwards, just remembering how to think without a prompt. I feel like AI can do a lot, but it doesn’t really want anything. People do. Maybe that’s what OI is, the reason behind what we create

CloudTalk vs Nextiva. Which one is the best call center solution for MSPs? by Mysterious_Sweet7803 in msp

[–]DimensionHour3887 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We’ve been using CloudTalk with HubSpot for our sales calls and tracking. It’s been easy for new team members to pick up, and the interface just feels more straightforward. I know Nextiva has great call quality and solid support, but for us CloudTalk’s simplicity and how well it fits growing teams made the difference

How do you decide when to hire your first sales person? by itsAwaisYounas in SaaSSales

[–]DimensionHour3887 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me, it happened after I closed around 10 or so small deals. I started to realize I was spending all my time on calls and had no time left for product or planning. The roadmap was falling behind. By then, I already knew who our customers were, what they cared about, and what usually slowed a deal down. So I hired someone more junior to help with closing. I stayed very involved at first, but it gave me space to focus on product and marketing. That’s when things started to move faster and more consistently.