There are millions of professionals in the US: accountants, lawyers, doctors. Professionals still use phone and email to reach their customers. These methods are not effective. No one takes phone calls; email goes to spam.
Our solution? WikiPro. WikiPro is an all-in-one business to customer communication platform. Professionals can use a web browser or mobile app to send instant messages to customers anywhere, anytime.
WikiPro simplifies your business communication, providing e-signatures and user-friendly interfaces to approve contracts immediately and securely. Features such as instant chat, file sharing and e-signatures, customized notifications and automated reminders to improve workflow and respond to your client’s questions instantly. Your team gets powerful shared inboxes to message from mobile apps and their web browser.
WikiPro can text enable your existing business landline. Your clients don’t need to install WikiPro Mobile App to contact you. They can send standard text messaging or SMS to your office number, providing flexibility for clients who aren’t tech-savvy, perfect for professionals such as accountants, lawyers, physicians, marketers and freelancers.
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As an accountant and WikiPro user, it saves me a lot of time in communicating with my clients. It is so easy to get a signature signed and get tax filing done. I can send text message, instant message and get response from clients in seconds. Highly recommended to any professionals.
Based on our record, Bandwidth seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 73 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I know this was a scam, but I spooked them (or broke the bot?) before I heard their plan. I did a reverse image search, and I found nothing. I looked at the metadata on the image, but I saw nothing useful. I looked up the number and found out it was a virtual number from bandwidth.com. I didn't know what to do after that, so I just reported the number to bandwidth. Source: 5 months ago
I wanted to add a secondary provider though with Direct Routing for fail over but was looking for recommendations. I'm in Canada so prefer someone with a Canadian POP but not mandatory. I also prefer self-signup when possible, similar to Telnyx, Flowroute etc. I was checking bandwidth.com as I see they do this but it doesn't let you sign up and wants you to contact sales. That's fine and I was planning on... Source: about 1 year ago
You can pop your area code and prefix in the link below and see what providers do have a presence. Obviously, Sprint/T-Mobile will be one of them but if you don't see bandwidth.com then you're out of luck and there are no workarounds. Source: over 1 year ago
Your provider should be able to provide a short code (e.g. '933' if using bandwidth.com) that will read out the e911 information for the number calling. Source: over 1 year ago
While I think you have your answer, another way to validate a number is to use https://freecarrierlookup.com/ and check the phone number. From that you can often tell if it is a "web only" number that a scammer outside the US would use. For example, it might belong to bandwidth.com or google voice. If it does belong to Bandwidth.com you can report it to them, and they are really fast at cancelling scammers. Source: over 1 year ago
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