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CafeX Shifts Toward CPaaS, Embedded CommsCafeX Shifts Toward CPaaS, Embedded Comms

Introduces Engagement Platform, aimed at reducing barriers to entry for communications platform as a service.

Michelle Burbick

November 13, 2018

3 Min Read
Cloud

CafeX Communications today announced the CafeX Engagement Platform, a communications platform-as-a-service (CPaaS) for enabling embedded communications. This introduction marks a pivot toward the cloud model and SaaS for CafeX, as I learned in a No Jitter pre-briefing. In fact, expect all CafeX solutions to be cloud-delivered moving forward, Sajeel Hussain, chief strategy officer at CafeX, told me.

“But this is not just about us going to the cloud,” Hussain said. Today’s release is also about CafeX moving away from standalone apps and shifting toward a focus on embedded communications and a platform approach. With the Engagement Platform, enterprises will be able to embed communications into workflows and mix and match services according to their needs -- all with a single API, he said.

CafeX’s Journey to the Platform

This single API is CafeX’s distinction, meant to address the complexity involved with using CPaaS.

“It’s still pretty cumbersome for customers to implement embedded communications,” Hussain said. While adding voice and video to an application is fairly straightforward, things get complicated quickly at enterprise scale with user interface, authentication, and other simple changes required. With an API required for every service, “you need an army of developers before you know it.”

CafeX is looking to relieve this pain point with its Engagement Platform, a single REST API, and prepackaged Web components for dropping into applications, Hussain said. “You can use all of the services or just a few.”

CafeXPlatformArchitecture_774.png

With this new architecture, as diagramed above, CafeX is aiming to make it very easy for developers to infuse communications services (shown in purple), in a way so that everything is retained throughout the other layers of the architecture. And in an approach that’s different from many of the large unified communications providers, CafeX doesn’t believe that resulting applications need to look and feel like a CafeX application, Hussain said.

With Engagement Platform, CafeX also provides a software development kit (SDK) so customers can make styling and design changes with reusable HTML tags they can drop into mobile applications and websites. The SDK also provides access to pre-built but customizable design templates for the user interface. With the SDK, CafeX is following the concept of reusing configurations and code to speed time to market, Hussain added.

CafeX’s packaged applications -- Live Assist for Microsoft Dynamics, for CRM; Meetings, for conferencing; and Spaces, for team collaboration – sit on top of Engagement Platform. “We start with the packaged applications at the top and want people to be able to consume our services without the package,” said Kevin Glass, CTO at CafeX. It’s all about flexibility, Hussain added.

Targets, Pricing, and Availability

Numerous customers have already deployed the platform, not only in contact center and customer experience use cases, but also in HR environments and for vertical applications like those for health care and finance, Hussain said.

Along with its shift to cloud and SaaS, CafeX said it has adopted a subscription-based model that will be available in a few flavors. Full details on pricing aren’t yet available, however. That should come in early 2019, with Engagement Platform slated for general availability in April.

About the Author

Michelle Burbick

Michelle Burbick is the Special Content Editor and a blogger for No Jitter, Informa Tech's online community for news and analysis of the enterprise convergence/unified communications industry, and the editorial arm of the Enterprise Connect event, for which she serves as the Program Coordinator. In this dual role, Michelle is responsible for curating content and managing the No Jitter website, and managing its variety of sponsored programs from whitepapers to research reports. On the Enterprise Connect side, she plans the conference program content and runs special content programs for the event.

Michelle also moderates Enterprise Connect sessions and virtual webinars which cover a broad range of technology topics. In her tenure on the No Jitter and Enterprise Connect teams, she has managed the webinar program, coordinated and ran the Best of Enterprise Connect awards program, and taken on special projects related to advancing women in the technology industry and promoting diversity and inclusion. 

Prior to coming to No Jitter, Michelle worked as a writer and editor, producing content for technology companies for several years. In an agency environment, she worked with companies in the unified communications, data storage and IT security industries, and has developed content for some of the most prominent companies in the technology sector.

Michelle has also worked in the events and tradeshows industry, primarily as a journalist for the Trade Show Exhibitors Association. She earned her Bachelor's degree from the University of Illinois at Chicago. She is an animal lover and likes to spend her free time bird watching, hiking, and cycling.