A voice paging system is the most popular add-on peripheral to a telephone system and one of the easiest to sell. This offers the potential to increase the size and profitability of every telephone system sale. By including a telephone paging system in each one of your telephone system proposals, you are offering a complete value-added voice communications system. It helps you support the “one vendor” concept and enhances your image as a knowledgeable communications consultant.
A few of the benefits offered by telephone paging systems are:
Emergency alert
- Voice evacuation or standard alarm increases safety.
- Reduces liability — possible reduction on insurance costs.
Broadcast announcing
- Gets information out quickly.
- Replaces trivial memos (lowering cost).
- Zone paging allows specific areas to hear selected announcements.
Locating people
- Increases productivity.
- Better customer service through greater accessibility to people.
- Professional image.
- Increased revenue (fewer lost orders).
- Reduces long-distance call back
Did you know that Group Paging on the VVX Business Media Phones enables you to broadcast one-way audio announcements to users who are subscribed to a specific page group?
Push-to-Talk (PTT) is a collaborative tool which enables you to exchange broadcasts with users subscribed to a PTT channel, much like a walkie-talkie. You can transmit pages and PTT broadcasts using your handset, headset, or speakerphone and you can reject them, place them on hold, and end them at any time. Both Group Paging and PTT are available on all phones that use Polycom UC Software. Both have potential to significantly improve the efficiency of your communications by instantly transmitting messages to any number of subscribers. For example, nurses working at a hospital can use the group paging feature to page a doctor; employees can inform co-workers of meetings or visitors. You can enable one of these features or you can operate both simultaneously. Paging and PTT each have 25 groups/channels you can subscribe to.
- PTT Mode: The phone behaves like a walkie-talkie; you can broadcast audio to a PTT channel and recipients subscribed to that channel can respond to your message.
- Paging Mode You can send a one-to-many announcement to a page group. Pages play only through the receiving phone’s speakerphone; pages cannot play through a headset or handset.
Important facts when speaking with customers
The Polycom Paging method is using a proprietary multicast protocol encapsulating an RTP stream
- 1 multicast address with 1 port. Separate paging groups/PTT channels are created using special headers within the multicast stream.
Competitive Summary
Cisco/Yealink/Snom Paging method: Raw RTP stream over Multicast
- Each Group/Channel is a unique multicast IP address-Port pair.
Max # of Groups
Polycom: Max 24 Groups for paging & additional 24 channels for PTT
Yealink: Max 10 paging groups (for listen and send)
Snom: Max 10 paging groups (for listen and send)
Aastra: Max 5 groups (for listen and send)
Cisco: Max 2 listen groups, max 5 send groups
Polycom Paging Benefits and key differentiators:
- Designed originally for use over Wi-Fi networks so there is a significant focus on robustness and fault tolerance in the face of connection issues, adverse or lossy networks
- Advanced Paging Priorities:
- Both Paging and PTT have a Priority, Emergency, as well as 22 additional page normal groups. Priority pages supersede normal pages. Emergency pages supersede all other pages and active calls
- Competitor phones - list all page groups in a precedence ordering so that pages interrupt each other according to the ordering
- Competitor phones – No specific emergency page group
- Competitor phones – No specific priority page group
- Polycom Paging instantaneous race conditions are handled based on MAC address assuming the pages both have the same priority
- Competitor phones – no info on how race conditions are resolved
- Pages received during active calls can be mixed into the call or indicated to the user that a page is waiting based on configuration
- Competitor phones – Have similar configuration to control whether pages play out over top of a call or not (barge-in / autoanswer -> Aastra, Snom, Cisco)
- Separate volume controls
- Emergency pages can have an increased volume compared to other page levels.
- Competitor phones – No independent control of volumes
- Paging volumes can be configured independently from regular call volumes.
- Competitor phones – No independent control of volumes
- Finer control of page group accessibility
- Paging group participation is available to the end user. Phone admins may configure which page groups are available then the end user can choose which of those groups they enable/disable via the phone UI
- Separate transmit capability allowing for some phones to be used for receiving pages only but not transmitting within a group.
- Codecs:
- All competitors can use G711 as well as G722 (wideband) codecs as well so no difference here.
- Paging group labeling
- The Polycom paging solution allows for labeling of a Page Group so that this label appears on screen announcing which page is playing
- Competitor phones – Typically label all incoming pages the same, such as “Incoming Page” with no differentiation of the group
Info about 3rd Party vendor support
I hope the above details helped and offered information that is helpful to you of why what Polycom implemented is a better solution.