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CallFire was ranked #15 within the [[Telecommunications industry]] in the Los Angeles metropolitan region.<ref>[http://www.inc.com/profile/callfire "CallFire: Company Profile"], ''[[Inc.]]''</ref>Much of CallFire’s annual growth is attributed to “the growth in calls and use of its service in U.S. elections as well as [[Hurricane Sandy]]”<ref>[http://www.socaltech.com/callfire_claims_record_growth/s-0047041.html "CallFire Claims Record Growth."], ''[http://socaltech.com/ SoCalTech]'' January 7, 2013</ref>
CallFire was ranked #15 within the [[Telecommunications industry]] in the Los Angeles metropolitan region.<ref>[http://www.inc.com/profile/callfire "CallFire: Company Profile"], ''[[Inc.]]''</ref>Much of CallFire’s annual growth is attributed to “the growth in calls and use of its service in U.S. elections as well as [[Hurricane Sandy]]”<ref>[http://www.socaltech.com/callfire_claims_record_growth/s-0047041.html "CallFire Claims Record Growth."], ''[http://socaltech.com/ SoCalTech]'' January 7, 2013</ref>

===Usage===

Political campaigns have started to use services in the [[cloud telephony]] industry. Services like CallFire are used by local and state candidates and issue-oriented political campaigns to reach potential voters.<ref>[http://www.marketwatch.com/story/following-second-debate-obama-and-romney-in-dead-heat-among-registered-voters-in-virginia-according-to-new-callfire-poll-2012-10-19 "Following Second Debate, Obama and Romney in Dead Heat Among Registered Voters in Virginia." October `9, 2012.]</ref> Various campaigns have conducted voter identification and persuasion, grassroots fundraising, rally crowd building, volunteer recruitment, [[Get out the vote|get out the vote (GOTV)]], and other activities.<ref>[http://www.marketwatch.com/story/following-second-debate-obama-and-romney-in-dead-heat-among-registered-voters-in-virginia-according-to-new-callfire-poll-2012-10-19 "Following Second Debate, Obama and Romney in Dead Heat Among Registered Voters in Virginia." October `9, 2012]</ref>

Services like CallFire are used by municipal officials, private businesses, and insurance agents to send emergency notification messages and calls about electrical outages, storm shelter locations and other urgent information along the path of [[Hurricane Sandy]].<ref>[http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20121102005245/en/2.5-Million-Affected-Hurricane-Sandy-CallFire-Cloud "For More than 2.5 Millions Affected by Hurricane Sandy, CallFire Cloud Telephony Urgent Messages"] November 2, 2012</ref> Additional uses are for advertising, e-commerce, human resources, and payment processing (see [[Cloud telephony]]).<ref>"Six Questions Every Telecommunications Senior Executive Should Ask About Cloud Computing" http://www.accenture.com/us-en/Pages/insight-telecommunications-cloud-computing.aspx February 15, 2011</ref>


===Competitors===
===Competitors===

Revision as of 21:14, 28 February 2013

CallFire, Inc.

CallFire Inc. is a cloud telephony services provider (SaaS) headquartered in Santa Monica, California, known locally as Silicon Beach. CallFire designs, develops, and offers web-based VoIP products and services as a business-to-businesses (B2B) service for small and medium sized-businesses (SMB's) and bills customers based on usage.

As of 2012, CallFire had over 50,000 clients[1] and billed over 185 million minutes.[2] CallFire hosts approximately 1.4 billion calls and text messages, 6 million campaigns, 80 million sound files, and 14 TB in storage (Network File Storage).[3]

History

The company was incorporated in 2004 by Dinesh Ravishanker, Vijesh Mehta, and Komnieve Singh.[4] Additions of Punit Shah, TJ Thinakaran, Dan Retzlaff, James Nguyen, Shane Neman took place during the initial years, and Ronald Burr was hired in spring 2012. [5]

Initial Success and Awards

In 2010, CallFire was ranked no. 285 on Inc. Magazine’s 29th annual List of America’s Fastest Growing Private Companies[6] According to Inc. in 2012, CallFire was nominated for the 2012 Small Business Influencer Award by smallbiztrends.com.[7]

CallFire was ranked #15 within the Telecommunications industry in the Los Angeles metropolitan region.[8]Much of CallFire’s annual growth is attributed to “the growth in calls and use of its service in U.S. elections as well as Hurricane Sandy[9]

Competitors

Twilio
Five9
IfByPhone

References