1. What is unified communications (UC)?
In at number 1, what is unified communications? Within technology industries we love an acronym or initialism. Whether it’s ‘UC’, ‘UCOMs’, or ‘UCaaS’ it’s critically important to understand in, a practical sense, what these terms mean. This is undoubtably the most important stat that you need to know.
So, unified communications (UC) is a effectively a marketing concept describing the integration of various communication services such as instant messaging (chat), presence information, voice (including IP telephony), mobility features, audio, web & video conferencing, fixed-mobile convergence (FMC), desktop sharing, data sharing (including web-connected electronic interactive whiteboards), call control and speech recognition with non-real-time communication services such as unified messaging (integrated voicemail, e-mail, SMS, and fax).
UC is not necessarily a single product, but a set of products that provides a consistent unified user interface and user experience across multiple devices and media types.
Voice services within UC platforms are the most important communication medium and Cavell Group’s enterprise research studies have shown that more than 90% of business across the US and Europe use telephony to communicate internally. Cavell specifically track cloud calling markets globally and define cloud calling users as those who are using a hosted or cloud-based PBX for their PSTN telephony.
For the purposes of this article Cavell is categorising a UC user as someone who uses cloud calling within their UC platform which is also procured on a subscription basis. For example, we aren’t including collaboration-only users (there are even more of those!) as they aren’t using external telephony within their solution, and therefore wouldn’t count as true UC.