When you use Microsoft unified Communications:
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The computer starts to work like a phone
To call someone, you just click on his or her name. The computer places the call.
It doesn't matter whether you see their name in e-mail, inside Microsoft Office
Word, or on a Microsoft Windows SharePoint Services site: their contact information
and the ability to reach them is always present.
Presence is one of the key benefits of unified communications because it unites
all the contact information stored in Active Directory with all the ways people
communicate: phone, conferencing, instant messaging, e-mail, calendaring. People’s
availability, their contact information, and the ability to communicate with them
are integrated and always just a click away.
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The phone starts to work like a computer
Try this with a standard office phone: call someone, then add someone else to the
call. Okay, now add ten people. Now, turn it into a live video call. Could you do
it? Is it even possible?
With Microsoft unified communications technologies, you click to call. Click again
and you can launch a conference call. Need video? It’s a click away. It’s
that easy.
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Voice mail becomes e-mail
Voice mail arrives in your Microsoft Office Outlook inbox, right beside your e-mail.
That might not sound impressive, but have you ever tried to forward voice mail using
the touchtone keypad on a telephone? When voice mail becomes e-mail, you can forward
it just like any e-mail: to one person, a work team, or an entire department.
Presence is one of the key benefits of unified communications because it unites
all the contact information stored in Active Directory with all the ways people
communicate: phone, conferencing, instant messaging, e-mail, calendaring. People’s
availability, their contact information, and the ability to communicate with them
are integrated and always just a click away.
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On the back end, things are even better
Change like this usually means a lot of new hardware, extra work for IT, and a vastly
more complex infrastructure. But not with Microsoft unified communications technologies.
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VoIP as you are
You don’t need a forklift to install Microsoft unified communications technologies
because Microsoft uses software instead of hardware. Microsoft Office Communications
Server 2007—the server that delivers presence, instant messaging, and audio-
and videoconferencing—integrates smoothly with your existing telecommunications
infrastructure, including your current PBX.
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Unified communications streamline infrastructure
Microsoft unified communications technologies use Active Directory to unify the
entire corporate directory—names, PBX extensions, e-mail addresses, and logons.
This simplifies IT administration.
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Use speech technology for self-service via the telephone
Voice portals offer callers an easy way to get to information they need using naturally
spoken language from any phone, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
The powerful speech-enabled Interactive Voice Response (IVR), Speech Server, which
is a part of Microsoft Office Communications Server 2007, can help businesses deliver
significant value through speech-enabled self-service applications via the telephone
at a very attractive price.
Such applications can be both inbound, like the above mentioned voice portals, as
well as outbound applications, like quality surveys or notifications via the telephone.
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Phone calls become digital assets
Just like e-mail. Which means they can be logged, reviewed, published, and archived.
Having a complete record and recording of every phone call is increasingly critical
as businesses struggle to comply with stricter federal and international regulations.
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Flexible and future-ready
By using a software solution to deliver unified communications, your business can
stay flexible and embrace innovations as they come. The Microsoft unified communications
platform of powerful APIs enables developers to extend that software solution with
security-enhanced and productivity-enhancing applications that span all modes of
communications. When emerging technologies and changing business needs require your
communications infrastructure to adapt, all you have to do is extend or upgrade
your software, not your hardware.