Phone Cards for international Calls
Phone
cards for international calls and long distance calls – talk
for a while and yet save money
There
was a time, before phone cards, when long distance
and international calls – even to friends and
relatives - required a good amount of preparations.
Everyone making
international calls had to back-calculate: • How
much money do I want to spend on this international
call?
• How many minutes does it give me?
• And what do I need to talk for this many minutes? Sound funny? Yes
it does in today’s world, where
phone cards are making long distance and international
calls cheaper
day by day. Phone cards were first introduced to
make long distance calling easy and convenient. One
could
make long distance and international calls from any
phone using these cards. Then came the price war between
the
long distance operators and the cost of calling using
phone cards started coming down significantly compared
to post-paid phone connections. Phone cards offered today come with different facilities
and operating modes: • Some
need a PIN to activate.
• Some need a call to be placed from pre-registered numbers.
• Some need a call to be placed on a toll-free number first
to dial long distance, or
• A combination of two of more of the above. Modes of payment also differ from operator to operator: • Some
cards can be used only as pre-paid ones. Once the minutes
allocated for the value
of the card
are over, the card is of no use.
•
Some cards come with the facility of “filling in
minutes” by paying an additional amount once
the allocated minutes are consumed.
• Payments are generally accepted over the Internet or
in collections centers in cash or via credit cards. Phone cards have, no doubt, made international calls
more accessible and cheaper. But still, differences in
service and rates offered by various operators exist.
Hence, it is advisable to shop around a little before
buying a phone card. Some of the factors one needs to
consider are: • Reliability
of the operator: Many fly-by-night operators also came
in to the phone
card business looking
at the response rate and the market size. Avoid them.
• Service quality of the operator: Check if the calls can
be connected at any time and if the line and voice
quality is really clear.
•
Rates: Rates offered by operators differ from state to
state and country to country. They may also depend on
the time when you call – higher at the time of
peak traffic. Hence, check out where you are likely
to call most and then decide on your operator.
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