While I dont know exact pricing I can tell you they hit you with
a nice one time fee for the two servers to start. IBM servers running
redhat in our case. Pretty much everything is licensed in detail.
Each server, running VMs, contains an app server, a network server,
a media server, a profile server, and an xsp server (I forget the
name of it and things have changed a bit in recent upgrades I believe).

You can choose to get a blade setup and put each service on it's own
server. Or whatever. Geographic redundancy. You name it.

The CDR server using oracle was pretty expensive and you require that
so users can see their calls... or whip up something on your own.

What hurts is the yearly maitainence fee on your licenses in our case.
So if you are not using them efficiently you are throwing money out
the window paying for support on licenses you bought but are not
getting revenue on.

There are a lot of catches you learn over time. Take call centers for
example. They come in 3 flavors so you have to understand what biz
customers really want before setting it all up.

Polycom phones work the best for us. Yealink does ok if you want something
cheaper. The process of setting up the first phone sucks but once done
you get auto provisioning features.

Customers find the web interface daunting at first. Even techy people.
But I think it is nice and done as well as they could.

Integration with salesforce worked like a charm. I was impressed.

Their xchange support resource website sucks for searching but eventually
you find what you need. Tons and tons of docs on everything for each release.

It does a lot. Rock solid. Almost every case of a problem was not Broadsoft.
Except for some patches revolving around java and their applications
customers can use.

All in all, I like it. Add a Acme pair in front of it and you have a
powerful setup.

matt


On Tue, 19 Aug 2014, Adam Vocks wrote:


Anyone care to say what a Broadsoft implementation costs?  I really don?t even 
know what broadsoft sells, is it hardware box that we rack up in our data 
center?

 

From: VoiceOps [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Alex Hardie
Sent: Tuesday, August 19, 2014 10:16 AM
To: Peter E
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [VoiceOps] Broadsoft MoH

 

It's pretty advanced guys - and expensive for a reason - it's bullet proof.  
Those centered around it being a POTS replacement are correct - when you look 
at business
continuity, scalability and reliability.  Taking those points into 
consideration it is the only platform that can exceed six 9's.

 

Even more so when you compare it to something like Call Manager or an Asterisk 
derivative... Asking either to scale is a mistake - at any load they become as 
unstable as
Gladys Kravitz on a triple espresso... 

Sent from my iPhone


On Aug 19, 2014, at 9:30 AM, Peter E <[email protected]> wrote:

      It may not be "the most advanced" but I'm not sure I agree with your "POTS 
replacement" assessment either. We have many, many enterprise customers and BW
      suits them just fine.

 

 


On Aug 19, 2014, at 7:11 AM, Alex Balashov <[email protected]> wrote:

The idea that Broadsoft is "the most advanced softswitch out there" is woefully 
misguided. It is "the most expensive softswitch out there"..

Otherwise, its feature set is geared toward generic, cookie-cutter POTS 
replacement.

On 18 August 2014 22:32:25 GMT-04:00, Colton Conor <[email protected]> 
wrote:

I was talking with a friend about their broadsoft implementation, and they 
mentioned that the had a client complaining about Broadsoft's music on hold's 
features.
Basically, the said you could only upload one music file at a time, and it 
would only play the beginning of that file every time. Plus you can only upload 
a .wav
file, and broadsoft won't convert a .mp3 or other audio file for you. 

 

Sure enough I checked out Wholesalers implementation, and found the same thing. 
Is this true for all Broadsoft installations? This seems like quite a feature
limitation for the most advanced softswitch out there. 

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--
Sent from my mobile, and thus lacking in the refinement one might expect from a 
fully fledged keyboard.

Alex Balashov - Principal
Evariste Systems LLC
235 E Ponce de Leon Ave
Suite 106
Decatur, GA 30030
United States
Tel: +1-678-954-0671
Web: http://www.evaristesys.com/, http://www.alexbalashov.com

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