Hi Simon,

Many thanks. All SMS messages will be to UK numbers and as you have 
suggested, I've seen the average price to be about 4 to 4.5p per
message.

Can you provide details of the hardware/software options you talk about
or
point me in the general direction thereof?

TIA,
Robert.

-----Original Message-----
From: Simon Butler [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday March 2009 14:36
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: SMS Messaging

Has your client looked at the costs of doing this?
I have been asked before to do it and every time it has been dropped
because of the costs. 
Here in the UK there are no free options, and unless you limit it
heavily, the staff will abuse it. 
You will need to sign up with one of the bulk suppliers, but you will be
looking at between 2.5 and 7p a message, depending on the volume. On
bulk messaging 10,000 messages is not a lot, add another two zeros to
get the best rates. At 10,000 pcm expect to pay around 4 or 5p a message
- UK numbers only. Double it for international in most cases. 

As for how to do it, there are two ways. Hardware, where you have a SIM
on a device connected to your network and software, where the message is
sent to a service provider, usually using an API. 

The market is very competitive so have a good look round. If you can do
it with hardware and your own systems then you can move between
providers easily. 

Simon. 


--
Simon Butler
MVP: Exchange, MCSE
Amset IT Solutions Ltd.

e: [email protected]
w: www.amset.co.uk
w: www.amset.info

Need cheap certificates for Exchange, compatible with Windows Mobile
5.0?
http://CertificatesForExchange.com/ for certificates from just $23.99. 
Need a domain for your certificate? http://DomainsForExchange.net/ 





-----Original Message-----
From: Robert Jackson [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: 19 March 2009 13:29
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: SMS Messaging

We've had a requirement from one of our customers to provide a facility
for SMS text messaging.

Does anyone have a feeling as to whether we should do this ourselves by
getting one or more SMS modems or using one of the many SMS services
out there?

Our application (to a backend database) has 2 methods of access:-
a web interface used by call centres and various levels of stakeholders
or a
Terminal Services logon to access the client runtime (this method allows
more
functionality than the web interface).

We're talking about sending/receiving roughly 10,000 SMS texts/month.
Texts
will be sent mainly from our web interface, but this facility could be
opened up
to Terminal Server users accessing the system/database.

Does anyone have any recommendations?


TIA.


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