Iphone Vs Blackberry

I have a blackberry, and it is great for e-mail. I have VitalTerm for my agency quote engine, and it works great on it. I have also used iPipeline on it as well.

I also travel with a small laptop with a 14" screen when I'm on the road, and have the tethering feature from the blackberry to the laptop for wireless access on the road. Also works great.

I am with Verizon Wireless, and Verizon is very strong up in New England. Near the metro cities, if Sprint is accessible, I have found that to work well also.
 
here is one, why not keep your cell phone and just get a netbook?

I have a treo 700p that I use for the phone, and if I go on meetings, I just bring my Asus EEPC, 10 inch screen, full windows, works great.
 
Sending attachments through email is just asking for the email to be eaten or popped in a spam filter. If you send more than one attachment to someone in AOL (or just a large one) it is often deleted or mungled such that it can't be opened.

Agents who understand how to use technology will store documents (brochures, quotes, articles, etc.) on their web server or on some other 3rd party file storage media and simply send the client the URL link.

I use MobileMe which makes it easy. You upload the document and then click the "share" option and it gives you a link to use when you want to share the document.

When I do quotes (and some of them are 1 MB or more) I don't send them through the mail, I just send the client a link like this:

http://files.me.com/acanton77/benb6n

I've found that a lot more of my mail gets through than when I send the documents.

YMMV.

Al3
InsuranceSolutions123 Agency

Thanks for this tip. Makes a lot of sense.

Question... Say your are out and get a call and the prospect wants a health quote. Are you on your phone running the quote (using vendor quote tool or Norvax) then uploading it to MobileMe and then attaching the quote doc and sending on?
 
Say your are out and get a call and the prospect wants a health quote. Are you on your phone running the quote (using vendor quote tool or Norvax) then uploading it to MobileMe and then attaching the quote doc and sending on?

The iPhone will not let you attach a file to an email but it will forward an email that HAS an attachment.

If someone needs the quote NOW... like before I get back to my office, I call my virtual assistant and she runs the quote for me and sends it. This does not happen to me often... maybe once a month if that.

I normally don't run quotes during the sales day anyway as that is a poor use of time. I tell client they will get it later on. I do quotes in the evenings.

I start my day a 6:30 AM and work (or visit clients) until about 3:30. I then to go my club and workout and run, come home, have dinner and then spend an hour or so running quotes or doing paper work... unless NCIS is on! :yes:

I find all cell phones to be cumbersome to send long, detailed messages or to do a lot of key-boarding with. Several quote engines will store your quote on their servers and give you a link to it that you can send to the client, so that is how I would do it. Some will even email it to the client for you.

My iPhone comes in handy when I need some client info. I can get onto my SugarCRM database on my server. There is a way to access it using what is called "ThinClient" which just sends the text stuff and none of the graphics which take longer to download. So if someone calls and leaves a voice mail. When I hear it I can then go to my SugarCRM database, pull up the client and refresh my memory about his/her case. I do that at least once a day.

One nice thing about keeping files (quotes, brochures, UW guidelines, app forms, etc.) on the server is you don't clutter up your hard drive with them. I could keep stuff on my own server, but the Apple MobileMe server for $99 a year is secure and convenient as it has a nice web interface. For my server I have to use the cumbersome FTP program. MobileMe works great for me (and it is not Mac specific. It has a program to link with Outlook on the PC from what I understand.) There are probably similar services but $99 for 20 GB of disk space as well as syncing and storing all my contacts and my calendar and my photos... and making it easy to send or retrieve or share... has been the best purchase I've made in the past year (started in March.) They have a 60 day free trial. I signed up after 2 weeks of use... that's how impressed I was with this service. It is not perfect, (it can be slow at times) but they keep improving it and I've received a lot of productivity from it.

YMMV.

Al
InsuranceSolutions123 Agency
 
No one with a brain will open any attachment - even if it comes from a trust source. I, like Al, upload everything to a file sharing site and send the link. I use Box.net.
 
So if I purchased an IPhone and used it on Verizon, what functionality do I lose if any?

I currently use a Treo 700p and it works fine, but slow.
 
No one with a brain will open any attachment - even if it comes from a trust source. I, like Al, upload everything to a file sharing site and send the link. I use Box.net.

Very true about attachments. Lots of companies simply strip attachments and put them through an analyzer and then re-attach them... often mungling them unreadable in the process. I write group health for law firms and they are the masters of crapping up an attachment!

The box.net looks good, but expensive (unless you use the free version, which I suppose opens you to ads or spam-mail). They want $10 a month. With MobileMe you pay less AND get syncing of your Outlook or Mac calendar and contacts as well as 4X the storage space. Better deal... unless the free version works for you.

Al
 
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So if I purchased an IPhone and used it on Verizon, what functionality do I lose if any?

I currently use a Treo 700p and it works fine, but slow.

If you purchased an Iphone and you used it on Verizon, you would be the envy of every hacker alive. Let us know when you succeed on doing this!
 
If you purchased an Iphone and you used it on Verizon, you would be the envy of every hacker alive. Let us know when you succeed on doing this!

verizon now operates on a GSM network as well. they also are getting on the sim card train finally. so if you have an unlocked Iphone (about $500 on ebay), you can use it with verizon from what im told. i actually had a verizon rep tell me that just the other day...

I am looking at upgrading from my blackberry pearl. I was thinking about the storm (new blackberry touchscreen), but I kept on hearing terrible things about it....turns out they seem to be true. The verizon websites customer reviews and ratings rate the storm at a 2 out of 5! I tried one out this morning and it was awful!! This was a brand new phone and it had all its software upgrades. It locked up on my twice in 5 minutes, the screen wouldnt turn when you turned the phone horizontal...or it would take over 30 seconds, the keyboard has a nice feel but its not very accurate and the words on the screen lag behind your typing...very annoying!! It did surf the web nicely, but that was one of the times it locked up on me.

Im a huge blackberry fan and like the idea of the touchscreen. I have used the iphone and it was very easy to use, I liked it a lot. Im going to get either the new blackberry tour (very nice, upgraded version of the curve or world), or im going to break off $500 for an unlocked iphone.

Im told that apple is coming out with an iphone like phone that will be for verizon...but his isnt supposed to happen until next year from what I hear...
 
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