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Fuze Combines UCaaS, CCaaS in Single PlatformFuze Combines UCaaS, CCaaS in Single Platform

Unified platform to enable more seamless communications between contact center agents and business users

Dana Casielles

March 30, 2020

2 Min Read
contact center solutions
Image: natali_mis -- stock.adobe.com

Cloud communications provider Fuze this week introduced a fully integrated contact center as a center (CCaaS) solution that embeds within its UC as a service (UCaaS) platform.

 

Marrying CCaaS and UCaaS will provide enterprises several benefits, Fuze said. They include:

 

  • Contact center agents will be able to reach out to subject matter experts within the business who can help them address customer inquiries and reduce time to resolution

  • The ability to support collaboration in general, between contact center agents and business users

  • Allowing supervisors to function as part of the whole sales team, increasing ease of administration, support, and communication

  • Enables company leaders to identify data trends, like calls around certain issues, who resolves them quickest, what methods work best for resolution, etc., and determine how these trends impact performance

  • Agents will be able to access queue information remotely, as well as sign in and out, and pause participation in these queues. That will enable streamlined agent connectivity for on-the-go customer support. According to Fuze, as more companies rely on remote work, a modality-agnostic approach allows agents to access the tools they need for their jobs.

 

Adding CCaaS into the UCaaS platform follows on the CCaaS integrations Fuze already offers from partners Five9 and Nice inContact. While those integrations have enabled end-to-end communications experiences for sales and support teams, the native integration will allow Fuze to support more advanced and complex use cases than it can through its partners, the company said. At the enterprise level, different teams have different requirements and different budgets, said Jed Brown, VP of product marketing at Fuze. In some cases, Brown added, a partner solution will be the right fit. In other cases, a Fuze solution will be the better bet, he said. By broadening its contact center portfolio, including the mobile component, Fuze aims to help customers find the right combination of tools to address their requirements, he said.

 

The unified platform will give Fuze a base to build upon with other integrations, Brown said. “The way we think about integrations, whether it’s a phone call, a meeting, or SMS integration with the customer – before, during, and after – and how a lot of our integrations can work across modalities, such as conversation, call, video call, or meeting – the same thing will start to apply to contact center service,” he said.

 

The unified platform is available now as part of the UCaaS licensing.

About the Author

Dana Casielles

Dana Casielles is an associate editor and blogger for No Jitter, Informa Tech's online community for news and analysis of the enterprise convergence/unified communications industry.

Before transitioning into this role, Dana worked as a digital content specialist to help a small business rebrand and build a better reputation. Prior to this, she briefly held a position as a copywriter for Career Education Corporation, where she served as a point of contact for marketing and strategic communications for three separate brands. 

Prior to testing the waters of the higher education and genetic testing industries, she was a copywriter for Internet Brands, a company that operates online media, community, and e-commerce sites in vertical markets. Here, she led the development of content and social media initiatives to drive new business, social engagement, website traffic, lead nurturing, and lead generation. 

Dana earned her Bachelor's degree from Columbia College Chicago. In her spare time, you'll find her freelancing, journaling, keeping her Hemingway cat entertained, or whipping up something in the kitchen.