VoIP telephone system

Mitel IP Telephones, Posts

Mitel Intends to Double In Size Within 3 Years

Mitel has three categories of expansion in mind; contact center, mobility verticals and the cloud. They have acquired companies in these divisions so that they can consolidate their growth. Mitel recently acquired Mavenir Systems to expand its mobile capabilities and capitalize on the demand for wireless 4G LTE services. This acquisition will expand Mitel’s footprint to over 130 service providers and mobile operators; it will cover billion subscribers globally. Mitel is also building on its contact center solution as an essential compliment to its cloud communications, voice and collaboration services. The Prairie-Frye and OAISYS acquisitions making this possible. Companies are increasingly looking for contact center call recording and quality management solutions to enable data to be converted into official business intelligence; this is an invaluable resource for all organizations. Mitel is also active in IP based communication solutions. They offer cloud-based telephony services and a wide range of network services. MiCloud is a Mitel hosted platform for voice communications. You can easily add most of the enterprise options that were once only available to big businesses because of the cost of implementation.

Business Telephone Systems News, Cabling, Phone Systems, Posts, Telephone Systems, Voice Data and Video Cabling, Voice Data video cabling, Wiring

Samsung SMT i5230 IP Telephone

The Samsung SMT-i5230 IP Phone has the features to help any office worker get the most out of their working day. It includes a 3.2″ monochrome backlit display and 15 feature keys to make sure that every feature is just one click away. The Samsung SMT-i5230 IP Phone would look great on any office professional’s desk. It’s features back up it’s design and can make anyones day more efficient. With 15 feature keys, everything is just one click away to make phone calls quicker and easier. The Samsung SMT-i5230 IP Phone is ideal for anyone wanting to have the best features available including executives and managers.

Business Telephone Systems News, Posts, VoIP Technology News

Technology Makes Off Site Working Easier

Did you read the Bergen Record on October 10, 2010? There is a great article, Technology making off-site working easier” by Carol Lawrence. The article highlights that technology is offering mobility features to small businesses by allowing it them to keep “valuable employees, widen sales territories, lessen employees’ commuting stress and even hire overseas.” The article also states that “nationally, the number of telecommuters grew to 17.2 million on 2008 from 12.4 million in 2006. Today’s workplace is no longer defined by the building with your company logo on it. Home-based employees and road warriors are becoming commonplace these days, and your communications system has to operate where your employees are most comfortable, everywhere. Mitel and Samsung IP telephone systems allow you to easily accommodate home, or road based employees by seamlessly connecting incoming calls to your remote location. Off site IP phones allow your transient workers to handle, hold, conference, transfer or page just as if they were in the office. A Samsung or Mitel system can offer you the following remote worker features:  Get your voice mail messages sent to your email in your cell phone or PC at home. Give out 1 number or extension to your clients that will simultaneously ring at your desk, cell and home phone. Use an IP phone at home, your cell phone or a softphone in your computer and be directly connected to the office; eliminate toll calls to the office. Make your cell or home phone a virtual extension of the phone system at the office. The phone functions as if you were in the office. Seamlessly transfer calls back and forth, put a call on hold at the office or on your remote phone, page over head at the office and check your voice mail. With SIP trunks, you can have a local presence for your remote workers, anywhere in the state or country by using their local telephone number that rings into your office. Comtex can provide you with the technology to offer teleworking at your business. For more information on VoIP,  and VoIP Samsung phone system and Mitel VoIP phone systems, please click the links or simply visit us at www.comtex-nj.com .

Business Telephone Systems News, Posts, VoIP Technology News

PBX: 20 Tips to Optimize your Business Phone System, Part 2

Advanced PBX Features- Now that you know what your default PBX system is able to do, it is time to explore the extent of PBX’s versatility. In this section we will cover more advanced PBX features which when properly integrated will provide your company with the capability to track user locations, transfer voicemail messages to email accounts and accept VoIP calls. 8. Consolidation: One of the more popular advanced PBX features takes on the “unified messaging” role, bringing together all of your telecommunications devices into a single convenient system. “PBX can bring together your cell phones, analog phones, VoIP phones, email, voicemail, IM, chat, video calling and more.” The technology works by linking all of your office devices together, and messages you on the appropriate device based upon your availability. The PBX system might try your cell phone first, your office phone next, the conference room, or maybe all 3 at the same time, depending on your settings. Whatever the case, the PBX system knows how to get a hold of you, and you should use that capability to your company’s advantage. If your employees are on the road and need their cell phones to act like their office phone, your PBX can do it. PBX consolidation gives you the freedom to work wherever you see fit and still receive all the unique telephony features PBX has to offer including line extensions, conference calling, call forwarding, etc. If your company isn’t currently incorporating consolidation technology into the PBX system, it is losing significant time and money by having “out of office” equal “out of touch” when it comes to your employees. 9. Personnel Locator: After consolidating all of your PBX features into one unique system, you are on the way to having a fully-functional mobile workforce. But what happens when you need to know exactly where one of your employees is? Not to worry, PBX systems can keep track of where your employees last interacted with the system, data that will allow you to pinpoint their exact location. 10. Email Integration: Modern PBX systems have the ability to merge with email clients (such as Microsoft Outlook) and retrieve contact information on the various customers you are on the phone with. Once a call is received, the name and phone number of the customer is automatically matched with existing records in your email contact database and their complete customer profile is brought up on the screen. From there you can get a more thorough idea of who you’re dealing with and will know how to better serve their needs. PBX telephony also boasts the capability to transfer company employees’ voicemail messages to their company email account. The messages are sent in easy to access audio files and allow employees to store and manage all of their voice mailbox contents. 11. Total “Business Intelligence” Integration: If you’ve successfully integrated email into your PBX system why not take it a step further and integrate your entire business intelligence operation? PBX systems have the ability to communicate with your computer and the customer databases you keep on that computer. To merge the databases and PBX, simply take the call information from your customer, probe the database and presto — you now have all of that customer’s contact information, previous interactions, purchase history, etc. Properly incorporating business intelligence and your PBX will allow for more streamlined and targeted customer relations, as employees will immediately know background information about the customer, that customer’s history with the company, past issues they have had and whether they have been flagged as a particularly important or problematic client. One of the ways you can take advantage of this technology is by analyzing your customer’s purchasing records and determining what they’ll need next as the call takes place. At the same time the call is taking place, you can email the customer quotes about your latest products that are related to previous orders he or she has placed, as well as go over these new products during that same call. Thus, the integration of “real time” accessible business intelligence data will allow you not only to better serve your clients, but it will also allow you to predict which products they might be interested in and use the call as an opportunity to pitch those new products. 12. Call Routing: Advanced PBX functionality allows for calls to be routed based upon certain criteria including caller importance, length of wait, time of day, day of week, etc. For example, if the president of your company is calling for sales statistics it’s probably not a good idea to have him wait in the standard customer queue. Likewise, if someone is calling after certain departments are closed it’s probably better to patch them through to the operator rather than have them traverse 2 minutes worth of menus to find out the bad news. Just as with call holding, caller mapping is the key to an efficient call routing scheme. Unless you know all the variants of calls the your company receives, you cannot begin to create a PBX routing system that will properly treat all of those callers. 13. Analog vs. IP Phones: To provide the greatest range of flexibility, modern PBX systems are able to direct calls through both analog and IP based phones. Both types of calls have their cost and service advantages. Consequently, it is important to setup your PBX so that calls which are more cost-efficient through VoIP (many long-distance calls) are routed through it, while calls that would benefit from the quality of analog are directed through those lines. It is rare to find companies that over utilize VoIP calling. As a starting point, begin by examining your analog calling for inefficiencies, rather than the other way around. 14. IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS): To take your PBX system to the next level you should make sure it has the technology to provide IMS functionality. IMS allows users to send and receive multiple types of media across a

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