Nearly 30 years ago, way before FaceTime was a verb, and Zoom was just a catchphrase for speed, and Slack still meant… well, slack, Steve Wei had already counted himself a veteran of the telecommunications world.
In fact, he was there at the dawn of web conferencing, designated as one of the earliest employees at communications-as-a-service pioneer WebEx, and if that weren’t impressive enough, he's even built and sold another company in this very space.
“I’ve been in the communication business for a very long time,” he says. “It’s kind of in my blood.”
But despite all that, the idea for Talktone’s Dingtone app came from, of all things, a personal frustration of Steve’s. “I travel a lot,” he explains. “Sometimes I needed to receive phone calls when I was outside the U.S.”
Back then, getting a second phone number like that (especially one that worked for someone while traveling outside the U.S.) was, as Steve characterized it, harder than it needed to be.
So, to fix this for himself, he launched Dingtone in 2012 under his company Talktone Inc., giving himself and any interested users free phone numbers and the option to juggle multiple lines from a single phone.
And just like that, what started out as Steve trying to address his own annoyance, quickly amassed a fanbase, to the order of 1 million users in its first year on Android to be precise.
“It’s a simple idea,” Steve says, humbly. “People want a second phone number.” In essence, the market was calling Steve back, and it was saying loud and clear on the line: we want this thing you’ve made, just not at any added cost.