Hey Folks,
We've run into this situation a few times over the years, and I'm sure we'll deal with this more and more. Phone system installers. Mainly, installing VOIP systems to replace aging POTS phone systems of yesteryear. I've now dealt with 3 different companies, installing systems at 3 different clients. And every single one of them I've run into seem to have no clue about networking.
In this latest example, a client of ours had their 15 year old phone system die. So they called the company to install a new one. At 4:45pm we get a call from them asking us to "open a port" on the firewall (they use a Sonicwall). when I asked more specific questions such as UDP or TCP? timeout settings? Source and destination IP? QOS? etc. I was told "Just open the port".......
In this case, it turned into emails between us, the client and the phone system provider, basically the phone guys saying we don't know what were doing and can't open a simple port. Us saying we need more information that they can't seem to provide. The guy even threatened to remove the sonicwall and replace it with his own router. (Seriously?!). We responded that removing this will cause a multitude of other problems. We've dealt with plenty of VOIP systems (we've been running on VOIP internally for 7 years now). and it needs to be planned correctly and set up properly. What I can already see happening (as its happened with other clients) is this system will get set up, but have problems with call quality, dropped calls, etc. Then the blame will then be pushed to us since we control the network.
I don't want to put my client in the middle of a pissing contest between the phone guys and us, but i'm also not willing to take any of the blame when this system doesn't work because it wasn't planned out, or installed correctly. We are contracted for support, but we don't cover the phone system. so when the phone guys are trying to pass this off as "just type in the port and click open". It's not as simple as it sounds. I can already see a slew of support requests once this gets set up.
Sorry for the wall of text, just curious as to how you handle these types of situations. We are contracted to provide unlimited support, but in my opinion, this doesn't fall under support, but rather a project/deployment, that we need to assist with, so this would be billable, which i'm sure my client won't be happy about.
We've run into this situation a few times over the years, and I'm sure we'll deal with this more and more. Phone system installers. Mainly, installing VOIP systems to replace aging POTS phone systems of yesteryear. I've now dealt with 3 different companies, installing systems at 3 different clients. And every single one of them I've run into seem to have no clue about networking.
In this latest example, a client of ours had their 15 year old phone system die. So they called the company to install a new one. At 4:45pm we get a call from them asking us to "open a port" on the firewall (they use a Sonicwall). when I asked more specific questions such as UDP or TCP? timeout settings? Source and destination IP? QOS? etc. I was told "Just open the port".......
In this case, it turned into emails between us, the client and the phone system provider, basically the phone guys saying we don't know what were doing and can't open a simple port. Us saying we need more information that they can't seem to provide. The guy even threatened to remove the sonicwall and replace it with his own router. (Seriously?!). We responded that removing this will cause a multitude of other problems. We've dealt with plenty of VOIP systems (we've been running on VOIP internally for 7 years now). and it needs to be planned correctly and set up properly. What I can already see happening (as its happened with other clients) is this system will get set up, but have problems with call quality, dropped calls, etc. Then the blame will then be pushed to us since we control the network.
I don't want to put my client in the middle of a pissing contest between the phone guys and us, but i'm also not willing to take any of the blame when this system doesn't work because it wasn't planned out, or installed correctly. We are contracted for support, but we don't cover the phone system. so when the phone guys are trying to pass this off as "just type in the port and click open". It's not as simple as it sounds. I can already see a slew of support requests once this gets set up.
Sorry for the wall of text, just curious as to how you handle these types of situations. We are contracted to provide unlimited support, but in my opinion, this doesn't fall under support, but rather a project/deployment, that we need to assist with, so this would be billable, which i'm sure my client won't be happy about.