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With RingCentral, Radio Host can Field Listener Calls while Sunning in Bermuda

StationlogoRingCentral Online spoke with Wayne "Holla" Waller of Baltimore, Maryland. Waller is an entrepreneur and host of the The B Factory, an internet radio program devoted to urban and contemporary gospel music.

What is Holla Walla?

41bvwa2svfl__aa240_WW: Holla Walla is basically a branded radio personality for my internet radio station. People from across the country can call in for giveaways, prizes, and requests, things of that nature. It’s just like a traditional radio station in a local market but it has a nationwide presence.

How have you set up your RingCentral service?

WW: I ordered the vanity number 1-888-FO-HOLLA, which is the primary number for the station overall. It is the direct connect for all of our communication needs: interaction with my listeners as well as interaction with labels and artists, vendors and sales. The vanity number helps with the branding.

How have you configured your extensions?

WW: I use them for the radio drops, interviews, and general interaction calls. What sold me on the service were the extensions and call forwarding [features] so that I can outsource a lot of the activities that go on in a radio station. I can set up the system so that calls can go to different phones and in different parts of the country.

Right now, you use about 4 or 5 extensions. Where are you directing these calls now?

510ylcsvdyl__aa240_WW: Right now I use one primary phone but I forward calls to my business cell when I’m traveling, if I need to. Some listener-based calls are forwarded to my production assistant.

Do you travel much and if so, what role does RingCentral play?

WW: I travel a lot. In fact, I’m out tomorrow on a five-day cruise. Aside from the radio station, I have a separate company for artist development and management, so I travel a lot on business and I use the call forwarding feature, which works great. My listeners don’t know whether I’m in my home studio or out. All they care about is that somebody answers the line. We could be on a cruise ship in Bermuda andItem6 I could answer calls from my listeners that have been forwarded to my cell with “It’s the B Factory” [laughs]. We need to make ourselves accessible because internet radio is still growing and in most cases it’s not as interactive as traditional radio. I did traditional radio in Washington DC for five years. It’s a different kind of situation with the internet because while you may have a lot of listeners, they have more reservations about calling. So when they call, I want there to be a voice on the other end of the line.

I noticed that you also use the customized music on hold.

WW: Yes, I have uploaded some of the loops and jingles for the show to the system, so callers-on-hold get promotional information. Everything is driven around the show and the brand.

How has the service helped your professional image?

WW: I’m really pleased with the service, the image of the service, and the image that it gives the station. It completes the operation and it gives a very corporate and established feel to what may be a home-grown fledgling business that's growing. It gives me the image that I need as I grow.

Why RingCentral?

WW: I read up on all of the options that were available, but the biggest thing that interested me was the vanity number and the price for what you offer. It rated really well and the service gives you everything and more, and that’s why I’m here.

RadiobutlrgTell me about the music you play.

WW: It’s all gospel. The concentration is on urban gospel but it’s a combination of both traditional and contemporary and we try inspirational music as well. It’s not directed to any faith-based or organizational religion but speaks to life overall.

Listeners can go to my web site www.hollawalla.com and access the program directly.

September 25, 2007 in Entertainment, General | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

City Hunt: What does the Da Vinci Code have to do with RingCentral?

Cityhunt_1 

RingCentral interviewed Katya Fisher, Marketing and PR Director of NYC-based City Hunt. City Hunt is an "experiential adventure agency" that develops custom-made scavenger hunts, primarily for employees of large organizations such as PepsiCo, Sony, Nextel, Pfizer, Sports Illustrated, United Nations, Time Warner, Deloitte and many others

What is City Hunt all about? How does it work?

Katya: We help employees with something they want to build on, such as teamwork or math skills, by sending them to different areas of the city to solve riddles and clues and play games. They're learning how to work together.

We also do public hunts and pub crawls for the general public.

Can you give you an example?

Katya: The craziest one we did was in Shanghai, China. A micro-electronics company was sending employees to Cityhunt_2Shanghai to learn about the city and they wanted them to do it in a fun way. We created an entire adventure where employees had to learn about local customs and landmarks--we put clues in fortune cookies and had employees ride rickshaws for transportation. They had to learn how to use chopsticks as part of the game.

Currently we're working with one major company on a product launch, and we created an adventure where journalists actually have to use the product to get through the game.

Is there a trend toward getting employees to play games together, like in the boom years?

Katya: There is a tremendous trend. There was a huge article about interns in the New York Times recently. CCityhunt5ompanies are now scrambling to get the best interns, and they started to implement these things to attract and train them.

Who founded the company and when?

Katya: Ben Hoffman and Jaymes Dec founded the company in 2001. They both went to NYU and were working for other companies at the time. They created these hunts for a friend's party and it took off from there.

What do these adventures accomplish?

Katya: One big one is team-building. Corporate companies will mix interns with VPs, people from different departments--and they'll have to work together to solve clues. We have one public hunt called the "Da Vinci Hunt" where we incorporated some ideas behind the Da Vinci Code to help people learn about New York City. But for corporate clients, the clues and games are geared toward specific skills the client wants their employees to work on, so if math skills is one, then we'll have trivia questions with mathematical equations. For the United Nations Junior Ambassadors, the clues helped them learn about geography.

Who uses your services?

Katya: Anyone, but mostly major corporations and some private groups.

I'm seeing bachelorette parties.

Katya: Yes, we do some bacheloretteCity7 parties. For instance, we'll have the women pose as Charlie's Angels. They get their own Bosley to escort them around the city and find the kidnapped finance. They'll go to the more fun places in the city.

How do you organize hunts in other cities?

Katya: The public events are all in NYC, but Ben and Jaymes go to other cities to do special events. They just did a major event in West Virginia, and they're going to Detroit and Chicago.

How do you use RingCentral?

Katya: We use it for our toll free number, 877-HUNT-FUN, and call forwarding. Calls are forwarded to sales, media relations and employee's private numbers. In addition, clues for the games are recorded and assigned to different extensions. While the participants are sleuthing around town, they use their cell phones to dial City Hunt's number and enter an extension to get to the next clue.

I can tell you one instance when RingCentral really helped us a lot. It was during one of the Da Vinci hunts and the participants were Australian students. You have to use your cell phone for this game to call in and get the clues, but none of them had any so we added an extension to our toll free number. We forwarded that extension to the normal number they were suppose to call, so they were able to use the pay phones and get to the clues toll-free. The games went off without a hitch and everyone had a fantastic time.

What do you charge for your hunts?

City6Katya: Public hunts are $20 to $30 per person. The private hunts range from $50 per person (baccalaureate), to $100, $150 or more per person for larger corporate events.

For more information about City Hunt, visit their web site: www.cityhunt.org or dial 877-HUNT-FUN.

December 21, 2006 in Business consulting/services, Entertainment, General | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

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