Skype for Business and IP Phones
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@Dashrender If they're all under 30, their "adult" metabolism hasn't kicked in yet, ha ha ha.
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@dafyre said:
@Dashrender If they're all under 30, their "adult" metabolism hasn't kicked in yet, ha ha ha.
lol hadn't considered that.
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@Dashrender said:
$15 per user per month for the PBX option seems like to much.
My local ISP will install a fully managed (with dedicated wiring, switches, internet connection and phone) for $20/user/month.
That's still REALLY high.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
$15 per user per month for the PBX option seems like to much.
My local ISP will install a fully managed (with dedicated wiring, switches, internet connection and phone) for $20/user/month.
That's still REALLY high.
What is? The vendor supplying/supporting everything (except power) from the phone all the way to the LEC? Don't get me wrong, I don't want to pay $20/u/m. But no out of pocket expense and they are going to run the cabling, install the switches, and manage the whole thing.. it's expensive, but only as much as Meraki is.
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@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
$15 per user per month for the PBX option seems like to much.
My local ISP will install a fully managed (with dedicated wiring, switches, internet connection and phone) for $20/user/month.
That's still REALLY high.
What is? The vendor supplying/supporting everything (except power) from the phone all the way to the LEC? Don't get me wrong, I don't want to pay $20/u/m. But no out of pocket expense and they are going to run the cabling, install the switches, and manage the whole thing.. it's expensive, but only as much as Meraki is.
$15/u/m is quite high. What all are you getting for that? For that price (and some guaranteed length of contract) getting everything from the phone to the LEC seems like a huge win for the VoIP provider. How many users are you looking at?
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@scottalanmiller said:
$15/u/m is quite high. What all are you getting for that? For that price (and some guaranteed length of contract) getting everything from the phone to the LEC seems like a huge win for the VoIP provider. How many users are you looking at?
$15 is what MS is charging for their Cloud PBX solution in O365 E5 $35/u/m total
https://products.office.com/en-us/business/compare-more-office-365-for-business-plansWhat do you get for that extra $15/u/m
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Advanced security for your data, that helps protect against unknown malware and viruses and provides better zero-day protection to safeguard your messaging system
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Analytics tools for users (Power BI) and organizational insights (Delve Analytics)
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PSTN conferencing to allow invitees to join Skype for Business meetings by dialing in from a landline or mobile phone
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Cloud PBX for cloud-based call management to make, receive, and transfer calls across a wide range of devices
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@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
$15/u/m is quite high. What all are you getting for that? For that price (and some guaranteed length of contract) getting everything from the phone to the LEC seems like a huge win for the VoIP provider. How many users are you looking at?
$15 is what MS is charging for their Cloud PBX solution in O365 E5 $35/u/m total
https://products.office.com/en-us/business/compare-more-office-365-for-business-plansWhat do you get for that extra $15/u/m
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Advanced security for your data, that helps protect against unknown malware and viruses and provides better zero-day protection to safeguard your messaging system
-
Analytics tools for users (Power BI) and organizational insights (Delve Analytics)
-
PSTN conferencing to allow invitees to join Skype for Business meetings by dialing in from a landline or mobile phone
-
Cloud PBX for cloud-based call management to make, receive, and transfer calls across a wide range of devices
Perhaps all of those features are worth $15/u/m, but they aren't to me.
This appears to be the only plan that supports cloud PBX.
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I thought that you were talking about your ISP?
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@scottalanmiller said:
I thought that you were talking about your ISP?
No, the ISP is $20/u/m for all cabling, switches and connectivity, unlimited calling local.
Figure the phones are $150, the cabling is $100 per phone, the switch is $20/phone. Figure the service is worth $4/u/m, means it takes around $270/$16 = 17 months to break even.
That's a better deal than I thought it would be.
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My guess is that $4/u/m is high. Very high. I bet $2 is a lot closer. NTG doesn't cost $4 per month at all and we don't have any scale internally. We have a dedicated PBX just for us, multiple carriers and still don't hit $4. If we were doing something at scale, we might get to closer to $1!
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Suddenly $20/mo hits profit at 6 months!
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Oh boy did I do that wrong.
It should have been $270/$16 = 17 months.
Yeah at $270/$19 = 14 months... Not sure where 6 came from?
But yeah that is an awful lot. Better to buy the cable switches and phones outright.
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Plus they probably get the phones at discount, and the switches too. Shaving a few dollars there ads up quickly.
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And they likely redeploy stuff, so they might deploy gear that has already been paid for.