Call recording is the most underused feature in business VoIP. Every provider includes it. Almost nobody turns it on. Here is why you should, and how to stay on the right side of the law.
Why Record Every Call
1. Dispute Resolution
"The customer said we promised X." "No we didn't." Without a recording, it is he-said-she-said. With a recording, you press play and the argument is over.
I have seen a single call recording save a client $140,000 in a contract dispute. The customer claimed the sales rep promised a feature that was not in the contract. The recording proved the rep explicitly said it was not included.
2. Training and Quality
Listening to your best sales rep's calls teaches new hires more than any training manual. Listening to your worst calls shows you where the process breaks down.
| What to Listen For | How It Helps |
|---|---|
| How top reps handle objections | Replicate success |
| Where calls go wrong | Fix the process |
| Customer complaints patterns | Product/service improvement |
| Hold time and transfer frequency | Operational efficiency |
3. Compliance
Financial services (MiFID II, Dodd-Frank), healthcare (HIPAA), and some industries require call recording. Even if yours does not, having recordings protects you legally.
4. Liability Protection
If an employee says something inappropriate on a call, you need to know. If a customer threatens your staff, you need evidence. Recordings protect both sides.
The Legal Framework
Call recording laws vary by state and country. There are two models:
One-Party Consent (38 US States)
Only ONE person on the call needs to know it is being recorded. If your agent knows (they do — it is your system), that is sufficient. No announcement required.
States include: New York, Texas, Ohio, Georgia, North Carolina, and 33 others.
Two-Party / All-Party Consent (12 US States)
ALL parties must be informed. You MUST play an announcement.
States include: California, Florida, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Montana, New Hampshire, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Washington, Connecticut, Michigan.
The Safe Approach
Play an announcement on every call regardless of state: "This call may be recorded for quality and training purposes."
This covers you everywhere. Nobody hangs up because of this announcement — they hear it on every call from every company.
How to Set It Up
| Setting | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Recording scope | All inbound + all outbound |
| Announcement | Automatic, before agent connects |
| Storage | Minimum 12 months, 36 months for regulated industries |
| Access | Role-based — managers and compliance team only |
| Encryption | AES-256 at rest, TLS in transit |
| Export | Must be exportable in standard format (WAV/MP3) |
Storage Costs
A typical call generates about 1 MB per minute of recording (compressed). For a 25-person company making 200 calls per day at 4 minutes average:
200 calls x 4 min x 1 MB = 800 MB per day
800 MB x 250 business days = 200 GB per year
Cloud storage for 200 GB costs approximately $5-10/month. Many VoIP providers include recording storage in the base plan.
VestaCall includes unlimited call recording with 12-month retention in every plan. Recording is enabled with one toggle in the admin portal, and the compliance announcement is configurable per-number for multi-state businesses.
Disclosure: I work on platform systems at DialPhone. Observations in this post are from hands-on testing and deployment work rather than vendor briefings.
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