
Telephony becomes a problem not when it is absent, but when it works unstably.
If 20% of calls do not go through, a business loses every fifth contact before the conversation even starts. In reports, this appears as “low conversion.” The team reviews scripts, marketing reviews creatives, but the root cause remains in infrastructure quality.
At the beginning, the difference between providers is almost invisible. During the first weeks, the system works smoothly. Problems appear under load: more calls, new countries, peak hours. At that point, delays begin, answer rates drop, and some inquiries simply never reach the team.
It is under these conditions that the reliability of telephony becomes clear.

Telephony is the first point of contact. If it works unstably, part of the demand is lost before any conversation happens.
In international campaigns, a drop in quality quickly shows up in the numbers.
A real example:
ASR drops from 65% to 50%
every second call fails to reach the customer
operators increase the number of attempts, spending more time on the same volume
In SaaS, this extends the sales cycle.
In call centers, workload increases without improving results.
One missed call often means a lost contact. There may be no second chance.
Problems build up gradually.
At first:
everything works steadily
calls go through
Then:
load increases and quality drops
new GEO leads to delays
scaling takes days or weeks
As a result, the business starts compensating with the budget. More traffic, more calls, more expenses. The root cause stays the same.
The difference between providers becomes visible not at the start, but under load. That is when it becomes clear whether the infrastructure can handle real traffic.
Having countries on the list is not enough. What matters is how fast connection happens and how numbers perform after launch.
If entering a new market takes 5–7 days, the business loses momentum: campaigns are delayed, GEO launches shift, part of demand is lost.
A working model looks different:
local numbers are available without delays
connection takes minimal time
launch does not require manual effort
In fast-moving niches, this means days or even weeks saved.
This is where most losses occur.
One route means one point of failure. Any issue or peak load immediately impacts answer rates.
A different approach is multi-route routing:
traffic is distributed across channels
the system switches routes automatically when issues occur
load is not concentrated in one place
During peak hours, the difference is immediate: one provider degrades, another maintains quality without manual intervention.
This is where provider differences become visible in numbers, not descriptions.
If delays appear as traffic grows, it is worth checking how routing is built and whether backup routes exist.
DID Global helps evaluate current infrastructure and identify call loss points before they affect conversion and costs.
Telephony becomes part of operations only when it is integrated. Otherwise, it remains a separate tool that requires manual handling.
If SIP or API are limited, it quickly affects operations:
route or number changes are done manually
CRM integration is partial or unstable
each scaling step requires extra time and resources
For high-volume teams, this turns into operational overhead.
For SaaS and call centers, the standard is:
stable SIP connection without drops
API for automation
ability to quickly adjust call handling logic
Without this, telephony slows down growth.
The price of a virtual number looks simple only before scaling.
The main costs are formed during operations:
different per-minute rates by country
international traffic pricing
additional fees for routing or load
pricing changes as volume grows
If these are unclear at the start, costs increase with traffic without control.
In a stable model, the business sees:
real cost per direction
cost forecast as volumes grow
clear terms without hidden fees
This allows planning budgets instead of reacting to invoices.
“At the start, most look at the number price or base per-minute rate. Real costs become visible later, when volume appears.
At that point, the difference between providers shows up in details: how international traffic is billed, what happens under load, what conditions apply to different destinations.
We usually model this in advance. We consider both current costs and how they will change with scaling. This helps avoid situations where traffic grows but the budget gets out of control.”
— Head of Business Development, DID Global
At the selection stage, most focus on coverage and price. That is enough to connect, but not enough to operate under load.
Problems appear later, when call volume grows, new countries are added, or peak hours begin.
99.9% uptime looks reliable. In reality, it means around 40 minutes of downtime per month.
For call center numbers, this is not a “technical detail,” but real loss:
dozens or hundreds of missed calls
lost inbound traffic during peak hours
KPI decline in handling requests
The question is not only the SLA number, but how the system behaves in critical moments.
It is worth checking:
whether backup routes exist and how they work
what happens during sudden load spikes
how long recovery takes
These factors define whether telephony can handle real traffic.
Telephony does not follow office hours.
Issues often occur in the evening or at night, when load is unstable. If response takes hours, the business loses that time completely.
The difference between providers becomes clear during incidents:
in one case, templated responses and delays
in another, direct involvement of technical teams and fast resolution
In telephony, response speed directly impacts losses. Every hour of downtime means missed inquiries and lost revenue.

Before connecting virtual numbers, it is worth running basic checks. This takes less time than fixing problems later.
Pre-launch quality test
Can the provider test call reachability and quality before connection? Without testing, the risk is high.
Behavior under load
How does routing perform during peak hours? Are there backup routes?
New GEO connection
How long does it take to launch a new market: hours, days, or a week? This directly affects scaling speed.
SIP and API
Is SIP stable without drops? Can processes be automated via API?
Real pricing
What do call costs look like by direction? Does pricing change with volume? Are there hidden fees?
Actual uptime
Not the number in presentations, but real system behavior: downtime history, recovery speed, failure handling.
Support speed
Who responds: support or technical team? What is the real response time during incidents?
Scalability
Can new numbers, countries, and channels be added quickly without rebuilding the system?
If some calls do not go through or quality is unstable, it already impacts sales, even if reports do not show it clearly yet.
Leave a request, and we will check how your telephony works: where calls are lost, how routing behaves under load, and where traffic leaks occur.
After that, you will clearly understand what needs to be changed to process more inquiries without increasing acquisition costs.

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