Act Quickly, 855 Toll Free Numbers Are Going To Go Faster Than Their Predecessors

by: blog-editor2 , September 7, 2010

With the release of the new 855 toll free prefix only weeks away, 855 toll free numbers are flying off the shelf faster than any of their predecessors. It may have taken awhile for the 800, 888, 877, 866, 855 or 844 toll free numbers to be used up, but now that toll free numbers have proven to be one of the most powerful branding and marketing tools that businesses can have, the demand for 855 toll free numbers is staggering. The launch of the 855 prefix is certainly a unique opportunity for businesses and is perhaps the best investment than can be made this year. 

Leading toll free service providers have already been offering reservations for 855 toll free numbers for a couple of months now so premium 855 vanity numbers are going very quickly. This is a unique time in the business world, and with the surge of new Internet businesses being launched at a faster rate than ever before, 855 numbers couldn’t have been released at a better time. The fact is that premium toll free numbers are no longer the reserve of corporate giants; they are now a necessity for businesses of all sizes. The demand for these U.S. toll free numbers is no longer staying within the borders of the United States. The dissemination of businesses across the globe due to entrepreneurs and corporations no longer wanting to be U.S. based as well as the boom in outsourcing means that a massive global desire for toll free numbers now exists.

Whether your business needs a vanity number for branding, batches of toll free numbers for maximizing marketing ROI, personal vanity numbers for executives, or it just needs to protect its current market share, 855 numbers are the answer. Who knows how long it will be before the next prefix is released for toll free numbers. Those who underestimate this opportunity could easily find that, for the majority of companies today, the difference between having an 855 number or not was the deciding factor in the success or failure of many businesses between now and 2012.


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