No meter running while a caller thinks. No surprise overage at month's end. KwickPhone is flat-rate — priced to pay for itself the first time it catches a call you'd have lost.

You've seen the answering-service invoice: a per-minute meter that runs while a caller rambles, a chatty regular, or someone who just wanted your hours. A great long call — the kind that books a big job — costs you more, not less. You end up half-hoping callers keep it short.
We see it: a pricing model that charges you more for a good conversation is backwards. You shouldn't have to watch the clock on a call that's about to become a sale.
KwickPhone is flat-rate — the long call and the short call cost the same, so you never have to weigh "is this caller worth the minutes?" again. The pricing is built to pay for itself the first time it catches a call you'd otherwise have lost: one booked job, one captured order, and it's earned its keep. No per-minute meter, no surprise overage.
Where per-minute services profit when a call runs long, KwickPhone doesn't. A flat rate means a ten-second hours-check and a ten-minute order both cost the same — and the model is designed so it pays for itself when it makes you money, not when a caller takes their time.
Don't take our word for it — pick up the phone and put it to work. Order something. Try to trip it up.