Get Voicemail In Your Email Inbox: GotVoice
by Michael Arrington on June 3, 2006

It doesn’t have a fancy design or well throught through navigation. I can’t find a single use of Ajax or javascript on the site (although there is some use of Flash). And that’s ok, because GotVoice does something I love - it converts voicemails from my home and cell phone into MP3s and sends them to me by email.

This is something I’ve gotten quite used to with Vonage (voicemails are sent as MP3s to my email), but I don’t have the same option from my cell phone carrier. GotVoice solved the problem for me. Setup took a few minutes (you have to give GotVoice your voicemail credentials) and then it just worked. Voicemails are now sent to my inbox as MP3 files (and saved in my voicemail system).

The basic GotVoice service is free, and they announced two premium services last week. The Plus service, which is $5 per month, allows more scheduled voicemail checks per day. The Premium service, which is $10 per month, has yet more checks, and also provides you with a RSS feed with voicemails included as enclosures. While I love the idea of having a RSS feed for the voicemails, it doesn’t justify paying $10 per month. The basic free service is more than adequate for me.

If you want your voicemail in the same inbox with your email, GotVoice is an excellent choice. This isn’t as fancy as Spinvox, which converts voicemails to text, but it does save me the hassle of checking voicemail multiple times per day. Note that it only works in the U.S.

Note: There are a number of unanswered questions about the service which are either not discussed on the site or have conflicting FAQs. The comments below go into this somewhat. I’ll post clarifications once I hear from the company.

Responses (Trackback URL)

Comments

I really like the idea of Spivox, just wish It would hit the US already (and with VZW)

As i look over the GotVoice site, and the service plans, the highest plan is up to 24 VM’s a day, which has me wondering does it not support more than that?

I am also skeptical about both these services on how they actually work to retrieve my voicemails..

 

Christian,

The retrieval works very well, but you bring up a good point on total number of voicemails. I signed up for the service on Friday and got it working right away, but it did only retrieve three voicemails, not the four in my inbox. I thought the “number of voicemail retrievals” referred to the number of times it checks your voicemail inbox, not the total number of voicemails it will pull down for you in a day.

The problem is that the service works well but the site and FAQs are just horrible. I can’t find the answer to this on the site and I have an email into the company.

One other issue I found - the site says you must have the “Plus” account to get MP3 attachments of your voicemails (otherwise you must log in to the site to listen to them, an annoyance). The voicemails I received yesterday were not attached, I had to listen to them on the site. But the ones pulled down today included the MP3s. There are conflicting FAQs on this as well…

I hope they get the website straightened out, but I have to say that even paying $10 a month for the service is worth it for me.

 

Many companies have been trying to solve the Voicemail “riddle” in a way that will detach the Voicemail from its Telephony perception. Let’s look at it this way - why do we leave voicemails only when we call? wouldnt you want to email a voicemail? IM a voice message? etc.

It seems like horizontal solutions (aka unified messaging services) fail to deliver the goods. Solutions like GotVoice which concentrate on an easy to comprehend use case seem to be the right solution.

One thing that does bother me though is leaving my very private voicemail credentials at the hands of a provideri don’t really know.

 

Shame that this is not available in Canada!!

 

I’m also thinking that the limit of VM/days is very low. I’m not sure people will pay for an unintegrated service. I personnally wait for the Google solution on voicemailing because i don’t want to go on another service to do my mailing activities.

I’m also asking myself is there is people willing to pay for that kind of service.

 

I have no need for this service, and I’m not sure why anyone else would have a need for it either. There may be a valid need, but I just don’t see it.

If you’re at work, why would you need to check your home voice mail? If you’re expecting a call, can’t you just check your voice mail every so often? How often do you wait for a call on your home phone while at work? Wouldn’t you just give your work number?

And for cell phone voice mail… Why would someone check their cell phone voice mail on a computer when they can just check it on their cell phone?

My telephone service is through a VOIP provider, so I do get voice mails emailed to me. This is the same thing that this service is offering. If my provider didn’t offer this as a freebie, I wouldn’t pay for it.

If someone needs me, they know where to find me.

But, of course, to each his (or her) own. If someone finds this service useful, that’s good for them and GotVoice.

 

Why has it taken so long for a service like this to emerge? The cell phone carriers should have been providing this service as an additional charge on your plan a long time ago. They are just missing out on my money, oh, but the cell phone carriers would add the “voicemail-to-email conversion” tax.

 

I agree completely Matt. The carriers should offer this and, fine, charge a few bucks a month for it. So obvious.

 

It would be nice if people who cover tech had memories that extended more than a few years. This is nothing new.

Nearly every telco voicemail system deployed today has the ability to forward voice mail to email. They can also forward voice mail to phones via MMS. Some version of this has been around since voice mail (which predates the web) was invented. The carriers have just opted not to turn this on. The mobile operators could enable voice mail to MMS in a minute if they wanted to, and know how to (they don’t, they make good money off people checking their messages the usual way).

GotVoice is nothing new, I’ve seen a dozen services like it come and go over the years. I built a similar service that enabled people to send MP3 voice mails from their phones six years ago. Assuming people are willing to pay $10 to have a machine check their voicemail for them (doubtful), they’ll have a business until the carriers decide to activate mail forwarding on their Commverse systems. If you do a search through old (mid-1990s) telecom trade rags such as Computer Telephony, you’ll see that the concept of voice-email forwarding is very well traveled.

In the meantime, there is a completely free workaround. Just re-record your voice mail greeting to say “Thanks for calling. I do not check voice mail. Send me an email at ___ or text me at ___. If it is really important, call me on my mobile number.” Works great, and then nobody, whether the telco or an intermediate parasite such as GotVoice, is getting into your pocket to deliver a non-essential service.

Simple, make your callers do your transcription for you and you never have to spend a dime on band-aids like GotVoice.

 

The website has a “Click Here To Hear a Sample Message.” It’s actually an introduction to the service, but begins by saying they would like to, “wish everyone a happy holiday season.” Yeah, I think the website needs some work.

 

Rather than wait for GotVoice to pickup your voicemails on a schedule, you could forward unanswered calls to eVoice and get vmail in your email immediately…

 

Thanks, I’d been looking for something like this! I like to archive my voicemails, and short of playing my cellphone voicemails next to my computer’s microphone, there was no easy, clean way of doing it. This solves my problem.

 

I don’t know why on earth would I make people send me an email when they call my phone and leave a message. Every body may not have access to it and if they wanted to they would have sent me an email in the first place. I remember years ago, I went to upgrade my cell phone service so that I could have paging capability for my cell phone the precursor to text messaging now. The sales person actually told me since they did not offer the service because they felt like no one ever needed it in the first place, “Why do you want to page someone when you can just talk to them on your phone.” Well seems to me that as many as text messaging that goes around today that question is as stupid back then as it is today because you want the ability maybe. I hope that sales person is no longer in business and I hope the guy Brian above is no longer in this business, we have enough backward thinking in this business. This service should be offered for free on all phone services today.

 

I love this service because it gives me a chance to archive important voicemails and save backups. I mean for situations where the person left a sentiment, or an important number/address. There can be many reasons why people could use this service. The retrevial is safe and I have programmed my phone to take this call on silent mode, so it does not disturb me. The process is pretty customizable, and can even delete voicemails after retrieval. I suggest give it a try before making a judgement.

 

Getting voicemails sent to your e-mail is the coolest aspect of this service. Other than that, though, it doesn’t really stack up to what I’m already using, which is video e-mail. Not only do you get the sound, but also the picture. I’m addicted to it as a sales and business professional.

But, this sounds like a good add-on or back up to that. I wish it had some kind of video component…once you use video in e-mail, there’s no going back. It’s amazing and has helped me so much in business I can’t even describe it.

 

Well, I can see why this might be a useful service for some people in some situations. On the other hand, I can see why this might be a totally annoying service for many people in many situations.

Correct me if I’m wrong, but GotVoice checks your voicemail a couple of times per day and then updates the status of all acquired messages from ‘new’ to ’saved’.

Imagine you’re not at your computer (perhaps hard for you and me but hey, it happens once in a while ;)). You’re in a meeting and you cannot answer phonecalls. After the meeting you want to check for new voicemails, and you call to your voicemail inbox. Without GotVoice the first thing you would be hearing is any new messages, which is exactly what you are interested in at that moment. But now suppose you’re using GotVoice and they checked your voicemail while you were at that meeting. Now, upon calling your voicemail inbox you won’t be hearing your new messages first. Instead most systems will loop through all saved messages (which might be a lot, since you don’t manually delete messages anymore). If you’re unfortunate your carrier’s system will do this loop in chronological order, forcing you to hear all older message to come along before you’re finally presented with the message you’re interested in — the new one. If you’re even more unfortunate the person next to you starts talking to you at the moment you’re trying to focus on the voicemail — “Damn, what exactly did the message say? Let’s hear it again”…

 

Some of the major carriers do offer this service. At least, mine is Verizon, and Verizon offers a product they call “iobi Home” (http://www.verizon.com/iobihome). It allows you to route voicemails to your email inbox, plus many other features (e.g. selectively forwarding calls). It costs $8 per month ($5 if you have a qualifying Verizon plan already). I haven’t tried it, but this announcement got me curious about it.

 

I dont know about you guys, but I can be contacted at any of 2 ip phones, 2 office lines, 1 800 number, and several other random numbers that forward. I work as a consultant.

seeing this brought a tear to my eye. Despite my cleverest efforts, i still get voicemails in 3 places, making it a huge pain in the ass to check my messages across all numbers. this service rocks.

 

I used the free version of GotVoice.com last year, and although it worked without a problem, I really didn’t “need” it. Just as was previously mentioned here, my main gripe was that it removes the “new” status of your voicemail, so if you’re not checking your email regularly, you may not know you have a new message.

However, last month, I found a great use for GotVoice: I was in Sicily & on the island of Malta for a couple weeks, and, knowing my Sprint CDMA phone wouldn’t work there, I set up GotVoice to retrieve my messages. I also added a comment to my outgoing message, telling callers they should leave an email address if they want a response. I was able to listen my messages on my laptop at the hotels, hot spots, & internet cafes, and replies were as easy as an email.

Last Friday, I set up my new VOIP system at home, and was surprised to see they, too, offer the voicemail-to-email option, but they do it right; no added charge, unlimited messages, and you have the option of keeping your forwarded messages as “new” on the service’s v-mail system.
[ http://www.Voiceral.com ]

 

This is nice, but I doubt voicemail is really popular yet.

It will take times for people to start using voice-email, instead of email. Nonetheless, I will still stick to typing instead of talking.

 

This is in reponse to a couple of comments about the status of acquired messages being sent to archived. I am on Verizon, and that has not happened to my message. I can still hear the ones that have been retrieved as new messages. I have been using this service for 3 months and have not had any problems..

 

Chris Pirillo did an interview with the CEO of GotVoice back in January. Here is a link to the mp3: http://www.thechrispirilloshow.....oice.phtml

 

It is nice to hear that so many of you are using the GotVoice service. We appreciate all of the comments and will take them as input for future versions. Please note that some of the comments are not accurate and, rather than respond to each individually, we recommend that people try the free service themselves and see if it is something that is useful for them. That said, we would like to clarify a few points right now:

• Our free service gives the user 3 scheduled automatic voicemail retrievals per weekday. An unlimited number of voicemails are retrieved within those 3 retrievals. So, if you have 8 new voicemails on your phone, we will pull all 8 of those for you, and you will still have 2 more scheduled retrievals left during that day. Plus you have up to 12 manual retrievals per day as well. Michael, we are checking why we only pulled 3 of your 4 voicemails. It looks like you helped us find a strange bug (which is now fixed), but we did pick up 4th voicemail on the next retrieval.
• I noticed a couple of people thought that GotVoice required a user to go to our website to access their voicemail. While a user can go to the website to check voicemail, almost all of our users have their voicemail delivered to their email, and then access it via a link to our site. The link spawns a flash player that plays your messages. Users of our Plus and Premium services have the option of having an attachment with an MP3 of their message sent to them via email. We require free service users to link because the advertisements in the emails pay our bills, and we have to be able to prove to advertisers that a user saw the ad. If anyone has any ideas on how to better accomplish this please tell us! Users of the free GotVoice service can still save their voicemails; they just have to hit the download link in their voicemail, and we allow them to save their voicemail locally.
• We plan to expand into Canada as well as overseas. It’s just a matter of resources! Any VC’s out there? With additional funding we will expand much more rapidly!
• I think a number of your users hit the nail on the head on why wireless carriers don’t want to deploy this kind of system. They make their money on minutes used. For them voicemail is a cost center, so why deploy any additional features that might cost them money? As far as call-forwarding solutions, they have their drawback; they usually cost, and the voicemail is not accessible on the phone company system. Some landline carriers offer a service similar to ours, but charge a lot for it.
• Regarding moving new voicemails to saved. We recognize this issue and are soon going to start offering to send a text message to users (if their carrier supports this) that GotVoice has moved a message. Some people find this useful, but others really don’t care, so we will make it a configurable option.
• Finally, we are working on upgrading the site! We have always tried to put the usability of the service first, and frankly our explanations of how our service works and what we offer has not quite caught up with our current slate of features. As I write this we are getting rid of the holiday message and replacing it with audio testimonials from our users.

Thanks again to you, and all of your readers, for trying our service and providing such valuable feedback.

 

Is GetVoice Down? To much traffic? Or Just Folds like the Fold?

 

1) Most of my communication with clients is with email, but sometimes it is voice mail. I can now store the voice mail with the rest of the client correspondance in one place and have it all backed up together.

2) I like the idea of being able to retrieve voice messages while overseas.

3) I like the ease of being able to forward a voice mail to multiple email addresses.

4) For Podcasters, this is another way of capturing voice comments to use on your podcast.

 

Oh my goodness - I was quite surprised to see this on here. I have been a GotVoice user for a little while now, having heard about it through MyPoints, of all places. I normally look to TechCrunch for new stuff, but this time you were a bit late! No matter, I still adore TechCrunch.

 

It seems to me that we are checking more and more places for messages and it is getting more and more ridiculous. Why is there not ONE place we check for all of our messages. That place could be different for any person depending on their needs, but it seems to me, making it so that we can get home and office email, cell, home and office voicemail, and dare I say fax, all on one machine, be it a PDA phone, computer, or whatever other device.

samfind
http://samfind.com

 

I just started using CallWave to get faxes in my inbox as PDF’s. I also got a bonus that I don’t really need but find nice regardless. On signing up they give me a local voice number and a local fax number. If I were to give out that voice number and someone calls it, I can screen the call as they’re leaving a voice message, and simply press 1 if I want to take the call. If I don’t take it, they email the message to my inbox and I can listen to it there or call in and get it. I need it for the fax feature, and it’s not bad for unlimited incoming faxes for $8 / month, so this is just a bonus to me if I decide to use it at some point.

 

So why not just put voicemail on your website to begin with?

The Audio Comment System from MyChingo.com offers both free and a paid membership service. The only difference is the maximum length of the incoming message.

You’ll receive an email notification of new voice mail.

You can share your voice mail with other site visitors using a single line of code that puts a flash player on your site.

The service automatically creates a RSS Feed.

There is built in text chat and voice chat.

You can moderate your own voice enabled chat room.

You can download your messages as MP3 files.

You can turn on moderation mode so that all new messages must first be approved.

http://www.mychingo.com

Michael Bailey

 

Can anyone recommend either a voip/phone or voicemail service that lets you set up multiple inbox options for callers?

(with Email or SMS notification of messages, I’d hope!)

Please write me at ML@NYChost.net … thanks!

 

I have a Treo 650 with Sprint and it says it is not compatible with the system. That seems strange since it is such a popular phone.

 

I’ve become a heave GotVoice user. In fact, I’m about to enable the option that has GotVoice delete the emails from my phone, so I don’t even have to bother w/ my phone VM at all.

Yes I wish the carriers offered this service directly, but maybe they’ll wake up at some point and add it. For now (or until GotVoice does a deal w/ them), this is the best solution I’ve found.

AND it makes it easy to forward VM’s to friends or colleagues when you need someone else to follow up on a VM; a HUGE plus.

BTW GrandCentral doesn’t attach the VM directly to the email like GotVoice does (not sure why they don’t do this!!!)

Just my 2c, but I love the service.

DROdio

 

Quick reply to DROdio…GrandCentral doesn’t attach the actual file to the email for a couple of reasons, mainly to ensure that your inbox, IVR and email stay in sync. Nothing is more annoying than listening to 20 messages as attachments in your email and then having those same messages showing as new and having to listen to them again when calling into the system to check your messages. That said…if enough users want the direct file attached and understand the tradeoffs, we’re more than happy to consider making that an option for users. - Best, Craig Walker (GrandCentral)

 

telemarketers people!they want and need those numbers,for online and regular phonetelemarketers.wake up and smell the coffee you dumbies.duh!and with this you not only give your phone,your friends, familys .phone numbers but there isp!!!!!!!whos that stupied ???????you all i guess.

 

They should really let you check your cell voicemail and text meassages on your email. Then you wouldn’t have to pay to check your messages with minutes. And you can reply to a text message free from your email. And this service should be free. Come on lets have at least one thing for free in life.

 

Unfortunately, I didn’t read GotVoice’s website, and other postings like on this site, close enough to find out about the ‘new’ and ’saved’ status issue.

This has been a HUGE problem for me. I rarely check my saved messages, it is the new messages that I am most concerned with because they need my immediate attention.

I did not know that I was getting new messages that were being archived as saved messages by GotVoice and the notification of new messages on my phone was being erased.

I only discovered the issue after several calls from clients who were pretty upset with me for not returning their calls (that I didn’t even know that I had received).

Shame on me for not doing my homework more thoroughly.

 

Voip does all this and more for free!

SunRocket allows you to view and sort voicemail messages online using the Member Account Manager.

You can receive notification of new messages by phone, email, pager, text message, or Instant Messaging (AOL IM, Yahoo IM, MSN IM or ICQ).

And when you want to listen to them, you can do so using any computer with Internet access.

Look for even more features coming to Voip in 2007.

 

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