LiptonDevelopment
IS-IT--Management
I've just switched companies and now am in charge of selecting a replacement phone system. The company I came from is using an IP Office 406v2 (120 users, 2 offices). It sufficed, but there were always some residual issues. Reading these forums has shown me that they were mostly known Avaya bugs, and seem to get fixed eventually.
My new office has 3 sites: Headquarters with 75 handsets, and 2 remote offices with 35 handsets each. We expect very little growth, and would certainly never hit beyond 150 in total.
A vendor aready showed them the Avaya CM and didnt even mention IP Office. Not sure why... We want to get some decent reporting and real-time stats like # of calls waiting in queue, and average answer time, etc.. I've never used CCC or anything before, so I don't know how well it works yet. Other than scalability and redundancy, is there any reason to NOT use IP Office in a scenario like this? I thought the IP Office system I worked with before was good.. or maybe I just got used to certain things.. hard to tell.
My new office has 3 sites: Headquarters with 75 handsets, and 2 remote offices with 35 handsets each. We expect very little growth, and would certainly never hit beyond 150 in total.
A vendor aready showed them the Avaya CM and didnt even mention IP Office. Not sure why... We want to get some decent reporting and real-time stats like # of calls waiting in queue, and average answer time, etc.. I've never used CCC or anything before, so I don't know how well it works yet. Other than scalability and redundancy, is there any reason to NOT use IP Office in a scenario like this? I thought the IP Office system I worked with before was good.. or maybe I just got used to certain things.. hard to tell.