You get what you pay for....if the telecom is critical to your business don’t you think the extra $20-$30/month worth it?
It would’ve helped to provide a context before rushing into review a product very few people use. Also, explain your acronyms on first use.
It’s OK.
You can forward it to your mobile
It’s relatively cheap.
A micro business is a hobby.
If you develop a real biz, $20-30/mo is insignificant.
Did you sign up for the regular Ooma service (geared toward residential phone use), or Ooma Office? I have the regular Ooma for home (with Premium), and use Ooma Office for my company. They’re not without their limitations, but both are significantly less expensive that the traditional alternatives. And they’ve been largely ‘bulletproof’ in my experience.
One caveat/disclaimer, I do NOT use the Ooma apps for my iPhone at all. Rather, I use the simultaneous ring feature to my mobile for my home’s 2nd line. Main line at home can just go to voice-mail - that’s usually only tele-scammers that get past Ooma’s spam-call filters.
for very modest costs, voip.ms provides excellent land line service, though their support is essentially non-existent.
I use the two-port obitalk gateway and a free 3rd party voip.ms management service, https://myvoipmsalt.com ,which is more useful than the native voip.ms management interface ...