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SBCs Accelerate Contact Center EvolutionSBCs Accelerate Contact Center Evolution

As contact centers leverage feature-rich communications technology, session border controllers become an important infrastructure component.

Zeus Kerravala

February 17, 2015

3 Min Read
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As contact centers leverage feature-rich communications technology, session border controllers become an important infrastructure component.

As the contact center is often the first company touchpoint for customers, we've all learned that a great contact center experience can leave a customer happy and ready to do more business. Conversely, a bad contact center experience can make a satisfied customer as grumpy as Patriots coach Bill Belichick when asked about Deflategate.

It's possible for a business to offer great products yet have the experience with a product be significantly overshadowed by a subpar contact center interaction. Bad contact center experiences can hurt a company's net promoter score, damage its reputation, and ultimately lead to revenue loss and decreased profits.

This is the primary reason why businesses have been obsessed with improving the overall contact center experience. One way to improve the experience is to shift the contact center from being driven only by voice to a more media-rich environment.

However, as contact centers evolve from legacy voice calls and leverage feature-rich VoIP, video, chat, WebRTC, content sharing and cloud, a new set of technical challenges emerges. A multichannel contact center requires interoperability among disparate platforms and applications, five-nines of reliability, and the highest levels of security. The technical challenges associated with these issues can overwhelm many businesses. However, with proper management of the challenges, a company can significantly improve customer service.

The session border controller (SBC), long a key component of enterprise VoIP deployments and service provider environments, holds the answer. While the SBC hasn't been a core technology in contact centers, the fact is it can proactively address all of the network-related issues that can degrade the customer experience.

For example, SBCs are built to protect network and communications infrastructure from security attacks such as denial of service, fraud, or other IP-based attacks that can compromise information or degrade performance. SBCs also enable interoperability across disparate platforms such as PBXs, IP-PBXs, contact center software, and endpoints, giving organizations a way to evolve the contact center while leveraging legacy technology. Lastly, SBCs provide carrier-grade network reliability, thus ensuring all calls go through with the best quality.

SBC provider Sonus Networks this week has enhanced its contact center solution through collaboration with Numonix, which offers recording solutions that contact centers use to improve customer service and lower operational costs. Sonus has incorporated the Numonix Recite call recording technology into its SBCs, creating an integrated platform capable of handling all of the network-related challenges as well as delivering a rich set of data for analysis and quick reaction to problems as they pop up. The integrated platform also provides a level of regulatory compliance by protecting data and monitoring and recording customer interactions.

In many ways, the ability to improve customer satisfaction will become the basis of competitive advantage in contact centers. This means new ways of communicating with customers and an increased focus on security and quality. The network security and carrier-grade reliability combined with the expanded partnership gives Sonus a great platform with which to attack the contact center market, a relatively new opportunity for SBCs providers.

Catch up with Zeus at Enterprise Connect Orlando, where he'll be participating in the EC Summit session, "Life in a Cloud-Based, Software-Intensive Future," on Wednesday, March 18. Register now and receive $300 off an event pass using the code: NJSPEAKER.

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About the Author

Zeus Kerravala

Zeus Kerravala is the founder and principal analyst with ZK Research.

Kerravala provides a mix of tactical advice to help his clients in the current business climate and long term strategic advice. Kerravala provides research and advice to the following constituents: End user IT and network managers, vendors of IT hardware, software and services and the financial community looking to invest in the companies that he covers.

Kerravala does research through a mix of end user and channel interviews, surveys of IT buyers, investor interviews as well as briefings from the IT vendor community. This gives Kerravala a 360 degree view of the technologies he covers from buyers of technology, investors, resellers and manufacturers.

Kerravala uses the traditional on line and email distribution channel for the research but heavily augments opinion and insight through social media including LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter and Blogs. Kerravala is also heavily quoted in business press and the technology press and is a regular speaker at events such as Interop and Enterprise Connect.

Prior to ZK Research, Zeus Kerravala spent 10 years as an analyst at Yankee Group. He joined Yankee Group in March of 2001 as a Director and left Yankee Group as a Senior Vice President and Distinguished Research Fellow, the firm's most senior research analyst. Before Yankee Group, Kerravala had a number of technical roles including a senior technical position at Greenwich Technology Partners (GTP). Prior to GTP, Kerravala had numerous internal IT positions including VP of IT and Deputy CIO of Ferris, Baker Watts and Senior Project Manager at Alex. Brown and Sons, Inc.

Kerravala holds a Bachelor of Science in Physics and Mathematics from the University of Victoria in British Columbia, Canada.