If I’m going to invest money in something I should be asking for more! more! more! How do I make sure that my choice keeps my organisation staying relevant in the way it communicates for the next chapter? Picking up, making, transferring calls is all pretty standard stuff we have been doing for few decades now. Telephones have been around for a long time, its nothing new. Spend the money to start new in the world of VOIP, but look to an existing technology that can provide this functionality (and hopefully more) before looking elsewhere.Throw more money at the dusty old PBX box for extra expanision cards and possibly cabling to terminal.This trigger point is usually when the PBX asset has reached capacity and there is a cost trade off The time may have come for your organisation to leverage your Microsoft agreement even further and look to your existing technology/application catalogue and see that Skype for Business can fill the requirements of your aging PBX. The main limitation around SFBO is the need for an IP-PBX and/or PSTN connectivity.
LOGIN TO SKYPE ONLINE LICENSE
Very little configuration is needed in SFBO and a busy administrators would have loved enabling the license SKU for SFBO for each users and then wiped their hands of it. If you are part of an organisation that has been birthed out of Skype for Business Online (SFBO) as part of your Office 365 subscription, it would make sense that you would have never had on-premises Lync or SFB servers in your Active Directory domain. Okay guys – you’ve been told “ lets move everyone back from the cloud! We need Enterprise Voice for our users” This will go against most Microsoft sales materials as we should be looking towards cloud.