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Joe Schurman

Microsoft cancels Response Point (VoIP/PBX solution for Small Business)

voip, response point, pbx, microsoft office communications server, unified communications

By jschurman on Thu, 07/09/09 - 7:53pm.

As you may have already heard, Microsoft has cancelled its Microsoft Response Point product, which stemmed out of Microsoft Research's Startup Business Accelerator/Communications Innovation Center group.  This hopeful compact small business PBX/key set system replacement had a lot of opportunity, but due to the product's inability to integrate with Microsoft's larger Unified Communications vision and product roadmap; it simply did not fit in.  The current version of Response Point will still be supported, but there will be no further plans to build upon the Response Point product roadmap.  I personally assisted with technical and sales readiness for this product so it was a bit of a heartbreak to see it go, but I am positive a branch and SMB solution for Microsoft Office Communications Server will provide the level of service organizations need to replace their PBX systems today and to provide a low entry cost for SMB communications.  In my opinion it was really a matter of time for this product to be cancelled due to its closed design and non-integration with other server products such as Exchange and namely Active Directory, but I still felt that the system had its place among keyset/PBX replacement products like Panasonic’s TDX platform. 

Bottom line, Small and Medium-sized businesses need a price-performance communications platform.  Whether this is provided within Microsoft’s Small Business Server platform or a lite version or appliance-based version of Office Communications Server, this is definitely a weak area that has not been addressed by Microsoft and customers are waiting anxiously, especially now.  In my opinion, there should the three models available to SMBs:

1.     An Office Communications Server Lite edition that runs on a hybrid gateway device that provides integration into Exchange Server, but provides a consolidated server/single license edition which includes all of the common voice and collaboration features a SMB needs to hit the ground running.  Simple setup and management is a must, which was the objective of Microsoft Response Point.

2.     An Office Communications Server Lite edition that runs within Microsoft’s Small Business Server product as an add-on module such as Unified Messaging or Exchange itself on the server.  Again, simple setup, consolidated design, single license.

3.     A hosted voice solution that provides integration with Windows Live and Office Live or through hosting providers to enable an even lower TCO for start-ups or self-employed individuals. 

Each system needs to provide SIP Trunking integration with common ITSP (Internet Telephony Providers) or provided in a hosted manner similar to the Windows Live voice capabilities through Windows Live Messenger. 

From a Microsoft Small Business Server or Blade/Gateway perspective, I think there should be an interface as well to provide branch office access to the Standard Edition version of Office Communications Server to help with growth of an organization moving from a SMB to Enterprise environment and include optional services such as Fixed Mobile Converged Device solutions from leading mobile carriers, video and hosted webconferencing solutions, and integration with popular SMB solutions such as Microsoft CRM, SharePoint, etc.

Regardless, Microsoft has got to get this right and quickly as Response Point was the only answer for small business voice solutions from the manufacturer over the past 5 years. 

Answer to Your Need for a Microsoft Based Solution to SMB PBX

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Joe I agree 100% with your analysis. Response Point was always on a weak note due to the fact that it was never placed under the UC or OCS team at Microsoft.

There is however an answer to SMB's out there that need a PBX solution that is Microsoft based that has the integration with OCS, Exchange, and SBS 2008. The answer is AltiGen.

AltiGen is built and backboned on Microsoft Technology. It has native integration to Exchange Server 2003/2007, Exchange Voice Access, Office Communications Server, Outlook and basically is the PSTN server that OCS needs to be complete.

Microsoft, HP, and AltiGen have even allied together doing a road show based around OCS which will be hitting over 40 cities over the next 12 months.

See for yourself!

http://altigen.com/news/NEWS_6-16-09-Roadshow.html

George

Additional comment

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One question to add here is, what happens to all of the Response Point OEM devices?

Joe Schurman
Founder, CEO
Evangelyze Communications
http://www.evangelyze.net

An option for current

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An option for current Response point customers is 3CX Phone System for Windows. 3CX is open standard and can be installed on a Windows machine, so its easy to use. It can also be used with the Response Point hand sets, since these were SIP phones...

OCS Standard Edition Server is $800 MSRP

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If I were an SMB owner, for my money, I would just stand up an OCS Standard Edition server and buy some SIP trunks along with some USB peripherals and my mobile phones and call it a day. A great day full of collaboration for happy employees and customers alike. At $800 MSRP for an OCS STD Edition server, everyone can afford what I believe to be the most complete communications solution for businesses hands down. But that's just me...

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About Joe Schurman: Microsoft Voice and UC
Joe Schurman is the Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Evangelyze Communications. Joe has provided consulting and research within the Information Technology industry and with Microsoft for the past 15 years and is a six-time Microsoft Most Valuable Professional (MVP). Joe has been quoted, interviewed, and published in international press including Wall Street Journal, CNBC, MSN Money, and through international webcasts, industry events, and hundreds of speaking engagements on every continent. Joe has published three books, including the technology best seller, Microsoft Voice and Unified Communications , published by Pearson/Addison Wesley in 2009 with aforeword by Gurdeep Singh Pall, Vice President of Microsoft and XD Huang, Microsoft Research Director of the Communications Innovation Center. Joe is a Microsoft TechNet Gold Presenter Award winner and is a leader in the Microsoft technical community. Joe is also a correspondent of the “World According to Garf” NBC Radio Broadcast focused on voice and unified communications technologies. Joe began his career at Compaq Computer Corporation and became the youngest managing consultant at Accenture in 2001 after which time, Joe became a private consultant to Microsoft for eight years with 2 1/2 years spent with Microsoft Research. Joe resides in Houston, Texas with his wife and three children and is a member of the Holland Society and the National Sons of the American Revolution. Microsoft Voice and Unified Communications was selected as the April, 2009, book-of-the-month by Microsoft Subnet. To enter to win one of 15 copies of the monthly book-of-the-month giveaway, visit the Microsoft Subnet home page fordetails.