There are many incredible services available to help small businesses with ShoreTel training for their ShoreTel communications system. With all of the great opportunities for businesses to have one-on-one support as well as comprehensive online tuto (more)
There are many incredible services available to help small businesses with ShoreTel training for their ShoreTel communications system. With all of the great opportunities for businesses to have one-on-one support as well as comprehensive online tutorials, it is easier than it has ever been to truly get the most from your ShoreTel VoIP system. (less)
From:
drvoip
Views: 1016
Comments: 2
ShoreTel forums are innovative ways to connect with professionals like yourself who are looking to network with others for a variety of reasons.
From:
drvoip
Views: 1035
Comments: 0
VoIP solutions are something every small business or corporation needs to consider switching over to in order to be competitive.
Lately the subject of ShoreTel Route Points and IRN’s has been getting a lot of “mind share” from those working with them. Two questions: How many Route Points can a ShoreTel server support? How many IRN’s can an ECC support? How many DNIS numb (more)
Lately the subject of ShoreTel Route Points and IRN’s has been getting a lot of “mind share” from those working with them. Two questions: How many Route Points can a ShoreTel server support? How many IRN’s can an ECC support? How many DNIS numbers can a ShoreTel support. Seems like a simple set of questions, but the answers are something like “herding cats”. (less)
From:
drvoip
Views: 855
Comments: 0
Choosing a VoIP service that fits the requirements of your business can be an arduous task. Buyer beware is a catch phrase that's applicable to business owners, not just consumers.
From:
drvoip
Views: 813
Comments: 0
The emergence of business VoIP as a mainstream service is changing the professional landscape
on how businesses need to stay current in order to be competitive.
Slide 1: ShoreTel Enhanced Workgroup Services! Historically, there were three services in the ShoreTel architecture that were no distributed to other servers. To over simplify, this meant that if the HQ server (read primary server) was unavailable, the services that were not distributed would not function. The three services were Route Points, Account Codes and Workgroups. For example, if a user group was set to “forced” account code verification and the server was unavailable, that service would fail and the effected user would not be able to place a call. Like wise, if the HQ server were unavailable, Workgroup services would fail. ( The “best practice’ deployment strategy was to backup a Workgroup with a “hunt group” given that the HG ran on a switch and not a server, it would continue to function in this scenario. Calls targeting agents in a Workgroup would fail over to a hunt group that would target the same list of agents). ShoreTel has steadily progressed the distribution of these services out from the HQ server to either SG switches or Distributed servers. With the latest release of ShoreTel, they have migrated critical services to include Workgroup services. This is a major enhancement and any organization that makes use of the Workgroup functionality, especially in a multi-site environment, will realize a benefit by these enhancements. Through the ShoreTel administration portal, we now find a drop down window that enables us to select which server should be utilized to run the Workgroup we are defining. For example, in a multi-site environment, I might want to have the Workgroups organized by Site and run the workgroup service on the DVM at that site. This would keep the Workgroup local and a failure of the HQ sever would not dramatically effect the workgroup at the remote site. We note that, in the absence of the HQ server, we are still unable to make database changes. For example, Logging In/Out of a Workgroup would not be possible, but the remote Workgroup would still function. Additionally, we note that you can continue to name a Hunt Group as a backup extension. The key difference here is that the Hunt Group can contain extensions that are Workgroups on other servers! This offers a degree of flexibility not previously available and is a viable alternative to a straight Hunt Group solution. A failure of the HQ server will only effect the Workgroups that are on that server and distributed Workgroups on other servers will continue to run. A failure of a DVM with an operating Workgroup can fail to a Hunt Group that can be used to route calls to other Workgroups. The vocabulary might be a bit confusing, but the strategy represents a significant step forward in assuring the operation of a distributed call processing application as powerful as ShoreTel Workgroups!