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Lync in the Contact Center?Lync in the Contact Center?

Is Lync moving into the contact center? Slowly. It seems it is still is a little too early to say surely.

Sheila McGee-Smith

January 5, 2012

2 Min Read
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Is Lync moving into the contact center? Slowly. It seems it is still is a little too early to say surely.

I have to thank Matt Brunk for his quite unintentional lead-in to my first post of 2012. His Understanding Lync did not prompt this piece but offers great context, as does Dave Michels' piece in late December, Lync Licensing: Effective Confusion.

What did prompt this story is a press release by WorkSpace Communications and AltiGen that they were partnering to deliver a hosted contact center solution for Microsoft Lync. One year into general availability, the contact center choices of potential Lync customers remains somewhat limited. Seven contact center vendors have announced interoperability of their solutions with Lync: Altigen, Aspect, Clarity Connect, ComputerTalk, Interactive Intelligence, prairieFyre and Zeacom. In conversations with several of these companies, it seems that the number of deployments on Lync remains low. In fact many implementations are best classified as in the pilot stage.

Why then a hosted contact center solution for Lync? WorkSpace CEO Bryan DiGiorgio says the success of the company's hosted Lync UC offer led to the need for a more robust contact center solution. Month over month, the company has seen a rise in the size of customers looking at hosted Lync, from sub-50 seat opportunities initially to several in the 100-150-seat size and others as high as 500-800 seats. In the larger line sizes, WorkSpace found that the Lync Response Group feature didn't provide enough contact center functionality. Partnering with Altigen allows WorkSpace to support bigger customers.

Because the WorkSpace/Altigen contact center is hosted doesn't mean it is multi-tenant. As is often true with cloud-based offers today, the Altigen solution will be deployed by WorkSpace as single instances in a virtualized environment.

David Tang, VP for Service Provider Sales & Marketing at Altigen, explains that the company's MaxACD Unified Contact Center for Lync is a good fit for departmental contact centers. Unlike some contact center solutions for Lync (e.g., Aspect Contact, prairieFyre and Clarity Connect), MaxACD does not run directly natively on Lync but instead communicates with Lync over the Unified Communications Managed API (UCMA). This is similar to the approach taken with Aspect Unified IP 7’s Lync integration as well as by Interactive Intelligence and Zeacom.

One year after Microsoft made Lync generally available there are a wide variety of contact center solutions available for companies ready to take the plunge, from small voice-only applications like Altigen's MaxACD to highly scalable solutions from market leaders, both hosted and premises-based. But is Lync moving into the contact center? Slowly. It seems it is still is a little too early to say surely.

About the Author

Sheila McGee-Smith

Sheila McGee-Smith, who founded McGee-Smith Analytics in 2001, is a leading communications industry analyst and strategic consultant focused on the contact center and enterprise communications markets. She has a proven track record of accomplishment in new product development, competitive assessment, market research, and sales strategies for communications solutions and services.

McGee-Smith Analytics works with companies ranging in size from the Fortune 100 to start-ups, examining the competitive environment for communications products and services. Sheila's expertise includes product assessment, sales force training, and content creation for white papers, eBooks, and webinars. Her professional accomplishments include authoring multi-client market research studies in the areas of contact centers, enterprise telephony, data networking, and the wireless market. She is a frequent speaker at industry conferences, user group and sales meetings, as well as an oft-quoted authority on news and trends in the communications market.

Sheila has spent 30 years in the communications industry, including 12 years as an industry analyst with The Pelorus Group. Early in her career, she held sales management, market research and product management positions at AT&T, Timeplex, and Dun & Bradstreet. Sheila serves as the Contact Center Track Chair for Enterprise Connect.