Luther Seminary is moving from an on-campus phone system to Zoom Phone in the cloud. The Seminary will move over in two waves with different departments in each wave. By the end of August, 2023 everyone will be moved over.
Key Benefits
- One application for meetings and phone
- We keep our same phone numbers
- Built-in texting (SMS)
- Use Zoom app on your cell to call, text, or video meet
- Voicemail transcription
- Supports hybrid work
- Less expensive than running our own phone system
Desk phone or no desk phone?
Our current desk phones will not work with the Zoom phone service. The preference is to use the Zoom App either on your computer or on your smartphone. We plan to limit the number of physical phones because the calling experience is simply better in the app. Criteria for needing a desk phone will be based on needs like
- The need for multiple phone lines
- The need for complex call forwarding and routing
- A case-by-case evaluation of individual needs
The Zoom App experience is better if you use a headset. If you’ve been using a headset for Zoom meetings then keep on doing that. If you do not have a headset OT can provide you with a basic one on request. If you are the rare person with a desk phone we will not provide a headset.
Open Sessions – June, July and August 2023
In June, July and August of 2023 we will have some community Q&A sessions. So if your question is not listed below then bring it to a community session. Watch the community announcements for dates and times. We have a short slideshow and a live demo before open Q&A.
Frequently Asked Questions
- How do I set my voicemail greeting?
- You can record a greeting, upload an audio file you recorded, or type a greeting and have a computer-generated voice read the greeting. To do any of these options:
- Sign in to the Zoom Web Portal.
- In the navigation menu, click Phone then Settings.
- Under Call Handling and Greeting, click Edit.
- Click Add Audio.
- Record a new greeting, Upload a file, or use Text to Speech.
- You can record a greeting, upload an audio file you recorded, or type a greeting and have a computer-generated voice read the greeting. To do any of these options:
- Can you answer a Zoom phone call while you are in a regular Zoom meeting?
- Yes, when you are in a Zoom meeting you will have the option to hold the meeting and answer, end the meeting and answer, or ignore the call which will send the caller to voicemail.
- If you want, you can change your Zoom settings so that phone calls don’t interrupt your Zoom meeting.
- You may also answer the call on your smartphone while in a meeting on your computer.
- You also have the option to escalate any Zoom Phone call directly into a Zoom meeting if you wish to add features like video or screen sharing.
- Will my phone number change?
- No, all numbers will be ported over to Zoom Phone and stay the same.
- No, all numbers will be ported over to Zoom Phone and stay the same.
- Can I still call people by their 3-digit extension?
- For the transition we will give everyone the same extension for that shortcut calling. However typing the person’s name is the preferred way to quickly call someone. In the future we may not create extensions for new phone numbers.
- For the transition we will give everyone the same extension for that shortcut calling. However typing the person’s name is the preferred way to quickly call someone. In the future we may not create extensions for new phone numbers.
- Will people see my personal number if I call from Zoom Phone app on my smartphone?
- No, if you make a call from the Zoom app on your phone the call recipient will see your Seminary phone number.
- No, if you make a call from the Zoom app on your phone the call recipient will see your Seminary phone number.
- If I choose to take Zoom phone calls on my computer instead of a desk phone, how does my phone ring?
- Your calls will come through the Zoom App on any devices that you’re signed in on (computer, smartphone, tablet, etc.). You may go to phone settings on the Zoom portal to change how this behaves – for instance, you can elect to ring a desk phone first then try your mobile phone/computer if you don’t answer your desk phone.
- Your calls will come through the Zoom App on any devices that you’re signed in on (computer, smartphone, tablet, etc.). You may go to phone settings on the Zoom portal to change how this behaves – for instance, you can elect to ring a desk phone first then try your mobile phone/computer if you don’t answer your desk phone.
- Do I still need to dial 9 before the number when placing external call?
- No, you no longer have to dial 9 for external calls. Simply dial the 10 digit number.
- No, you no longer have to dial 9 for external calls. Simply dial the 10 digit number.
- Where do messages go?
- In the Phone tab of the Zoom app, there are sections for call history, voicemail (with transcription), and phone lines that you have access to, and SMS messaging. The phone tab will appear once we have completed the Zoom Phone transition.
- Zoom will also send you an email whenever you receive a new voicemail message with a text transcription of the message.
- How will my Zoom Phone device connect for service?
- If you have a desktop phone set for your workspace, your phone will connect to the same wired network port that your current desk phone uses.
- Zoom Phone service on your work computer, smartphone, or other device connects through whatever Internet connection the device is using – this could be the campus wired network, campus Wi-Fi, your home Internet connection, etc.
- Will Zoom Phone work during a power outage or natural disaster?
- Current and Zoom desk phones will only work if the campus network is working, but unlike our existing phones, Zoom Phone will work from smartphones and computers over any Internet connection including cellular, giving us more options for resiliency and mobility.
- Current and Zoom desk phones will only work if the campus network is working, but unlike our existing phones, Zoom Phone will work from smartphones and computers over any Internet connection including cellular, giving us more options for resiliency and mobility.
- How using Zoom Phone with earbuds/headset would work? Would any calls to your office ring through your computer?
- When using a mobile device: the sound will come through your phone speaker, or default to your bluetooth device if there is one connected.
- When using a computer: It will use the same device that you use for Zoom meetings (built in microphone/speakers, or any connected audio devices such as bluetooth earbuds.)
- When using a desk phone: The phone will work the same way that the current phones work. You can talk and listen using the handset or place a call on speaker phone.
- If you do not have a desk phone, where would calls go if your computer is off or you aren’t on campus?
- Any device with the Zoom client on it can make or receive phone calls. You can set the days/hours you wish to receive calls to prevent getting calls outside of your work availability.
- Devices with the Zoom client can get calls off-campus as long as the device has any Internet connection.
- If you choose to install Zoom on a mobile device like a hotspot, you can make/receive calls even when your computer is off or in sleep mode.
- If you have a desk phone, the phone will ring simultaneously with your computer (unless you chose sequential ringing from the question above.)
- What are the costs associated with my device selection?
- There is no additional cost to the Seminary if you use your computer or smartphone.
- The traditional desk phone is the most expensive option for the Seminary, costing over $100 for each phone set we purchase.
- We use a shared line in my department, will this still work?
- Yes, managing shared lines and permissions is very easy in the Zoom web portal.
- Yes, managing shared lines and permissions is very easy in the Zoom web portal.