Because contact centers utilize a mixture of technologies to address different channels of communications, they are often faced with a complex environment. Avaya offers a wide array of solutions, which allows them to scale their offering to best suit each enterprise. Avaya's portfolio of features really falls into a couple main categories: Avaya Aura Experience Portal deals with the IVR, Avaya Enablement Services deals with outbound dialers, CTI, or screen popping, and the Call Management System deals with the ability to manage agents, routing, skill sets, and visibility while on-call.
Nearly all vendors provide a self-monitoring tool, and Avaya is no exception. It's designed to be used by small organizations as an interim monitoring tool, and it primarily focuses around the agent. It's designed to monitor the Avaya systems but nothing outside of that. Avaya leans on platinum DevConnect partners, like IR, to provide comprehensive monitoring for Avaya solutions so that they can focus on the core of their business. For example, IR's monitoring tool for Avaya's contact center suite focuses on how all components of the contact center fit together, not just Avaya's systems in isolation. It ensures the system is performing as designed and provides visibility over the quality of experience, end-to-end. In fact, independent research firm Nemertes Research found that organizations using third party solutions for monitoring and troubleshooting the UCC environment enjoy a host of benefits in comparison to those who don't, including; halving UCC operational costs.
The benefits of using a third-party monitoring tool like Prognosis can be realized almost immediately. Within 45 minutes of turning on Prognosis for a large government agency, for example, we discovered that the Avaya routing for voice calls was incorrectly configured to traverse other parts of the network. They didn't become aware of the issue until visualizing the flow of traffic through switches that weren't designed to handle voice traffic. It allowed the organization to remediate the issue before going live. If they didn't use a monitoring tool that provided this level of visibility, they would have experienced significant voice quality issues, especially when you consider the volume of traffic that was planned to travel through the network.
After implementing a third-party solution users should notice how increased visibility within the environment reveals potential issues that they didn't know about. Simple issues like voice quality, but also potential oversubscriptions or licensing anomalies. For instance, there may be unused stations with licenses that are costing extra money. Are connections into the gateway SBCs operational? In order to make the most of product features when monitoring Avaya, it's critical not only to obtain alarms, but also to actually have a plan for action in place. Once you see an issue, you must be enabled to take corrective action and tangible steps to lead to resolution. When those components are in place, the value that third-party monitoring tools brings to your contact center will be enhanced.