Telephony


Telephony

Two types of commercial phone systems are offered by Inclusive Technology Solutions (ITS) to meet your communication needs. We offer Standard PBX phone systems along with Hosted PBX solutions. Prior to deciding which system is right for your business, many serious considerations must be taken into account. Which PBX will integrate into your existing organization IT and business practices?

Hosted PBX vs. Hardware PBX


Specific differences between a hosted PBX service, and a hardware or software PBX depend on the particular PBX equipment being compared. A hosted PBX solution from Inclusive Technology Solutions offers a full-featured system with capabilities very similar to the most expensive hardware systems. There are some key differences, however, that arise from the basic way the systems work.

Hosted PBX

 

Hosted PBX or Virtual PBX systems offer robust feature sets and capabilities very similar to the most expensive hardware PBX counterparts. There are some key differences, however, that arise from the basic way the systems work.


A hosted PBX service has a different set of advantages. A hosted system is maintained by the service provider, so there is no hardware or software for the client to pay for or support. Calls are routed from the hosted PBX to extension owners through the public telephone network. Each person that wants to receive calls has to have a working phone, so there is no sharing of phone lines between extensions. Calls can easily be routed to anyone, at any phone, in any location. Administration of the system is done simply, through a web-based interface, with little need for extra time or knowledge.


For a full description of how Hosted PBX equipment works, click here.

Standard/Hardware PBX

 

Standard PBX equipment is usually within an office or building. Usually a single piece of hardware with multiple incoming phone lines shared across a higher number of extensions.


Premise-based equipment is usually employed inside an office or building. It is usually a single piece of hardware that has multiple incoming phone lines shared across a higher number of extensions. Calls are answered by the PBX equipment, and then routed to a specific phone through hardwired lines inside the office. Sending a call outside the office to someone telecommuting or working elsewhere is often impossible, and always results in additional costs. Maintaining PBX equipment requires knowledge of PBX and phone technology and someone to do the work.


For a full description of how Standard PBX equipment works, click here.

Functionality

 

Factors that come into play are cost, future expansion, control, flexibility, range of features and options, and implementation.


The following table summarizes some of the main differences between Virtual PBX's hosted service and a typical premise-based system. Virtual PBX has the premier hosted PBX system available today, so not all things true of this service will be true for other hosted systems, but there are some clear differences:


  Virtual PBX Standard PBX
Up-front costs Very low Very high
Support costs Low Moderate
Costs per minute on incoming calls Moderate Low to very low
Share incoming phone lines No Yes
Routes calls to any phone Yes No
Supports distributed employees Yes No
Scalability Very high Limited
Call capacity Very high Limited
Full feature set Included Expensive
Fault tolerant Yes No or expensive
ACD queuing Included Expensive
Distributed administration Yes No



A hosted PBX, like the VirtualPBX service, is clearly the better choice for companies with distributed employees and those that want to limit initial capital outlay. A hardware PBX makes more sense financially when employees are all in one location and the cost of incoming calls must be kept extremely low.



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