Nortel RAO (Remote Agent Observe) card. Allows for observing and recording and saving to a FTP server for later listening. Not a bad piece of HW, "when it works".
If you are looking to record the voice calls and store them in a meaningful format, two of the biggest players are Nice and Witness. Witness have recently announced becoming Nortel's preferred supplier (or something along those lines).
We use Nice, which does a lot but is expensive (we're stuck recording calls lineside, which adds further to the expense!)
How large is your call centre i.e. How many, agents, seats Do you require screen capture?
Are you considering VOIP in the near future.
Have many years experience with call monitoring technologies and happy to help.
In our ComCentres, some calltakers log out by unplugging their headset, instead of using the Make Busy key: They don’t even wait to see that the “logged out” indication shows on their M3905 sets! The Standard Operating procedure tells them to use MSB, but it’s human nature to take shortcuts where they can.
In most cases, they get logged out without any issue; however, there have been some situations where a call gets presented to them at the moment they unplug.
Since call presentation is set to “Call-Force”, the call sits on their set without them even know. The Symposium doesn’t even realize that they have unplugged.
Has anybody else that have had this type of occurrence?
With regards to Nice and Witness, if you are recording VoIP, especially if it is a 'green field' install, you will cut down on some of your cost.
As I said we record lineside which means that each of the phones that needs to be recorded is physically connected to the call recording logger. This is a massive overhead for doing moves and changes and also adds to the complexity of the solution making it more expensive to support. Currently our call centres (we have several distributed across several buildings in HO) may have for example 100 desks, of which only 40-60 are taking calls at any one time (although cost saving measures mean this is changing). This means we are paying for more capacity than we use.
Compare this to VoIP where you license to the maximum number of concurrent agents on line. E.g you can configure 100 agents but only pay to record up to 60 at any one time. Additionally, there is minimal cost associated with moves and changes as in an IP world, users have extension mobility and it is the user that the logger is recording and not a particular set (that's not to say that the physical set doesn't need to be taken in to account when setting up recording).
Further benefit can be gained from integrating to your call recording supplier e.g. create an application on the phone that allows you to tag calls with an outcome, a policy number etc. Other benefits include the recording of the calls as two seperate streams (Nice support this, not sure about Witness) i.e. you can listen to one half of the call if there is a lot of shouting or distortion. Most VoIP solutions also support record on demand. When using RoD, users who don't have a requirement to be recorded all of the time e.g. team managers can be set as RoD. If they receive a call which they realise halfway through they should record, they can record the call in its entirety.
Nice records the VoIP packets by sniffing the SPAN ports of the switches the phones are attached to. This means you are limited to how many phones you can record by the number of SPAN ports on the switch (you are likely to want to keep one freen to attach a network sniffer to in the case of network issues too). The Witness solution has no reliance on using SPAN ports, but instead creates a duplicate VoIP stream that it sends to the recorder. This does have the disadvantage of increasing data traffic on your network. Nortel are apparently to license this to Nice as well.
So in summary, VoIP recording is very powerful. The amount of money you spend can be enormous, but a simple solution with none of the bells and whistles shouldn't be prohibitively expensive. I have worked with Nice products for many years and only seen the Witness solution demo'd. I would say Nice would win in terms of functionality (it's a BMW compared to Witness's Ford). The strategic tie up with Nortel is a bonus for Witness though. If you are a Symposium user (now CC6), Nortel's strategy is integration of its products into a single management front end (web, email, outbound, inbound, reporting). It would make sense to also integrate call recording although I don't believe it's currently on their road map.
There are several other companies you can look up I found when doing some investigation. I haven't had any dealings with them, other than voice conversation or sales literature, but you may find that any alternatives are worth investigating.
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