Interested in hosted voice? Not sure if it’s for you, or whether your business is ready? Surely, there must be more to it than putting your phone system in the cloud.
Well, yes there is. Hosted voice has become the backbone to digital transformation and often viewed as the first step to moving your business to the cloud.
Introducing a new technology into any business is a long process. Anything that can speed that up must be helpful. We’ve created the ultimate guide to choosing a hosted voice solution to be just that.
Since most IT professionals specialise in one area, tackling hosted telephony for the first time can be a tall order. In order to fully understand it, there are reams of information and architecture to understand. We’ve created this ultimate guide to hosted telephony, as an introduction into the space.
Rather than becoming a solution engineer overnight, what you will need to know is just: what hosted telephony is and how you can use it. Let’s take a look at the basic principles.
At the start of your journey, you’ll be inundated with new products and services that are designed to sit on top of your IT infrastructure and provide a feature rich telephony experience.
Before you get carried away with features and functionality, it’s important to get a thorough understanding of what hosted voice is.
Hosted voice is often referred to using other terms. When used together or by different providers, it’s hard to gauge whether you are talking about the same technologies. In general, these terms listed below all mean the same thing:
Hosted voice, or any of the terms above, are essentially taking a phone system and hosting it in the cloud. As phone systems are moved into the cloud, the door opens for businesses to consume more innovative features and functionality that are not available on a traditional PBX.
Understanding the what, why, how and where to start are fundamental points when looking at hosted telephony. This guide to hosted voice is the perfect way to quick start your hosted voice journey.
For more information, read our blog: What is hosted telephony?
If you compare on-premises and cloud PBXs side by side, there will be some glaringly obvious differences. The technical architecture is completely different. The features and functionality changes from limited to unlimited. But, most importantly and most obvious is the cost difference.
The items on your initial invoice were no doubt considerable compared to the expected up-front costs of a cloud PBX. Cloud technologies are favourable for those companies looking to switch from a CapEx model to an OpEx model. On top of this, there will be some regular outgoings that you may not have planned for when you first purchased your PBX.
Items that don’t appear on your PBX purchase invoice are the hidden costs that just get paid as they are deemed business essentials. Items like phone lines, engineering, repairs, maintenance, additional licenses and usage are viewed as part and parcel of an ongoing business.
As you move to cloud technology, and cloud PBXs in particular, these costly items get wrapped up into one license that cover everything. By moving from an on-premises PBX to a cloud PBX, you have a clear view of the charges you should expect to pay for the next 3-5 years. When business planning, cost is king.
For more information, read our blog: Is Your On-Premises PBX Costing You More Than You Think?
Some providers publish their list of features for their hosted voice solutions. Reality is that there are so many features that redirecting you to a feature list doesn’t benefit anybody.
Traditional phone systems of old came with feature cards that informed you of the 50 things your phone can do. As cloud technology has matured, not only has the functionality set expanded exponentially, but new features will continue to be added to on a regular basis.
The core features of hosted voice will always include things like HD calling, disaster recovery and various operational functions like transferring, music on hold and call recording. Discussing these features would be the same with most provider – and doesn’t help differentiate between solutions, providers or even on-premises vs cloud.
Hosted voice comes into its own when you explore the exceptional features. The stand out items that you simply cannot implement on your current phone system.
For more information, read our blog: Top 5 exceptional features of a cloud based phone system
It’s easy to talk about the benefits of hosted voice because there are so many. Each individual feature can bring a different benefit to a different user. When evaluating whether to choose hosted voice or stick with your on-premises solution, hosted voice is usually broken down in the following categories of benefits:
For more information. read our blog: Hidden Benefits of Hosted Telephony
You are not the only business evaluating hosted voice right now. Adoptions stats show that the VoIP market will grow to over $200bn by 2020 and that the average cost of calling will reduce by 90% through VoIP adoption. It is right to acknowledge that demand for hosted voice is on a continuous upward curve. It is better to know the reasons why there is such keen demand for hosted voice.
Staff are more mobile than ever. Through innovations like guest and social Wi-Fi, 4G calling and video conferencing, your business has employees that require collaboration outside of the office. Mobility is a key trend driving demand for voice.
Trust and reliance on tools to automate processes is at it’s highest. Through the introduction of devices like Alexa and Google Home, consumers have started to trust tools and applications to do their work for them. Hosted voice is no different. Businesses can employ an intelligent IVR or a constant VoIP monitoring system to conduct the mundane tasks that do not require genuine human interaction.
Just like trust in automation, cloud confidence has reached an all time high. As technology has evolved, businesses have started to put applications, servers and data in the cloud. In the modern world where cloud technology is widely recognised as safe and secure, businesses have made an informed decision to migrate their phone system to the cloud too.
For more information, read our blog: Top 3 Trends Driving Demand for VoIP
As IT managers and CIOs progress through the hosted voice process, many questions are asked. No question is more common than “will my network performance impact hosted voice?” The answer to this is, simply, yes.
Ultimately, if your network is performing poorly, any applications or devices that sit on top of, or form part of, your network will be affected. In anticipation of a hosted voice deployment, it is important to get a step ahead of your users. By taking care of any network considerations, you reduce the likelihood of queries and support tickets following implementation.
To ensure your network is ready for hosted voice, consider these three beginner steps:
When moving to hosted voice, ensure your network equipment is fit for purpose. A top spec voice router and enough bandwidth via your internet service provider are good starting points here.
Prioritise VoIP traffic to improve both latency and jitter. This is typically achieved by using bandwidth reservation, policy-based network management, Type of Service and Class of Service.
Without a clear view of your network, you won’t know where the problems are occurring.
Every business is different. Therefore, every business will have different hosted voice installation requirements. We have seen a variety of industries implement different VoIP deployments and have noted some common themes and key activities to conduct when planning your installation requirements.
Taking away one user’s phone may not be an issue. Removing a thousand phones could have a negative impact on morale or productivity. Conducting an audit of hard phone versus soft phone is a simple place to start when capturing requirements. Some organisations take a top down approach and we see internal product champions. Identifying user personas and their associated requirements is a key first step when gathering requirements.
Outside of individual use, it is important to factor in collaborative work and meetings. Hosted voice also caters for your meeting rooms as well as your users. Just because they don’t have a voice doesn’t mean they should go unheard.
The most feared requirement is usually how and when to install. Do you take the big bang approach and migrate everybody over at the same time? Do you stagger the install over a matter of weeks and locations? Every business is different. Therefore, every business will have different hosted voice installation requirements. No matter what they are, it’s important to get them right.
For more information, read our blog: Hosted Telephony Installation Requirements
When designing your hosted voice solution, there are key components like the core voice platform, but there are also bolt-on products that drive innovation and higher productivity within your business.
The number of bolt-on type products differs from vendor to vendor. Generally, these products look similar as they are all trying to reach the same end goal: enhance the core solution. Included with our hosted voice solution are some industry leading peripheral products that could transform your business even in a standalone capacity. We include them in our hosted voice solution to offer these best of breed technologies to be consumed when required.
For more information, read our blog: Top 5 Hosted Voice Products
If the features, benefits and trends are enough to sway you towards hosted voice immediately, there are some key elements that you should contemplate before dismissing making the move.
Simply, if you nearest competitor is using better technology, they have more chance of winning business that you otherwise might have won.
And vice versa. Given the choice, your business should be the one that gets ahead of the competition. A leading hosted voice platform can be used as the platform for a business to be completely market dominating.
Dominating a market often means expanding and recruiting for new staff. When seeking and hiring new talent, demands and expectations have changed. If the technology available in an interviewees pocket can do more than your phone system, they are likely going to accept an offer elsewhere.
The other end of the talent spectrum is looking after your own. Simple things like not having a line available or a salesperson’s client not being able to contact them can deteriorate even the best of working relationships. A forward thinking, innovative company can retain its best staff by always keeping up with technology.
The four points above all point to productivity. Better technology enables a more productive workforce. People buy from and want to work for the most productive companies. If your phone system is the hub of your business, it is the right time to implement hosted voice.
For more information, read our blog: Why now is the time to move your business to hosted telephony
Our hosted voice solution comprises a carrier grade platform, best of breed telephony and conferencing hardware endpoints and market leading peripheral services.
FluidOne use a BroadSoft platform to deliver core telephony features and functionality. BroadSoft, Inc. is a global communication software and service provider that was purchased by Cisco Systems in 2018for $1.9bn. With leading market share in cloud UC call-control shipments, BroadSoft is the industry leader in cloud Unified Communications and hosted voice. BroadSoft is chosen by 25 of the world’s top 30 service providers across 80 countries.
FluidOne has selected market leaders Polycom and Yealink as the suggested handset manufacturers for hosted telephony. The decision to choose Polycom or Yealink is factored in at the requirements gathering stage. Both manufacturers specialise in different scenarios. It is important that our solution is tailored to your requirements, rather than prescriptive.
Polycom are widely recognised as the VoIP handset market leader and were recently purchased by Plantronics for $2bn.
Yealink provides more specialist handsets such as the recently announced portable CP930W conference unit.
Scalable from 2 to 10,000 users, 200 sets of historical and real-time call statistics, dials, alarms, charts and desktop wallboards are at your disposal.
Real time and historical call analytics are available across the entire hosted telephony platform. This suite of services delivers completely customisable reports and insights related to all extensions, devices and groups within a business or department.
Integrating business communications with third party applications enhances the capabilities of your other business applications. Integration into desktop environments like Office 365, Salesforce and Lotus Notes combine your frequently used tools to leverage joint features through computer telephony integration (CTI). Once connected, features include contact popping, click to dial, desktop call control, presence, messaging, and calendar sync.
For more information on what our hosted voice solution includes, click here.