Among the new products is the VG248 analog phone gateway and Cisco Conference Connection, server-based software that lets users schedule and access meetings when using a Cisco IP phone. Information about a meeting, including conference ID numbers, is stored on the server and is shown on the phone's display at the touch of a button, says Hank Lambert, a Cisco marketing director.
Chemical maker H.B. Fuller Co. is using the VG248 analog phone gateway as part of an effort to improve communications in its customer-service call center and in its offices across the globe. Fuller has seen cost savings in long-distance expenses by using a data network to supply voice, says Kevin Wetzel, manager of Fuller's global network services. The company plans to have the IP infrastructure installed in 30 of its 105 offices by the end of May and in its customer call center by December.
Because call centers have become integral to many large businesses, IP telephony is popping up on the radar screen of network managers, says Jon Arnold of Frost & Sullivan. "IP apps are friendly to call centers, because they will cut down on long-distance expenses and enable you to have call-center agents operate anywhere," he says. Arnold adds that having the ability to distribute call agents regionally across time zones and have 24-hour customer support is a compelling argument for IP telephony.
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