Kleenmaid Thinks Of Phone And Fax Print E-mail
Written by Adam Gosling   
Monday, 04 December 2006
The kitchen and laundry appliance retailer has settled on an , has chosen an integrated IP PBX and contact centre from Nortel to support its expansion to a new head office on Queensland's Sunshine Coast.

With the company's existing PABX at the end of its life, a move to a new head office was the perfect opportunity for a clean sweep of the company's communications platform.

David Ingram-Johnson, IT manager at Kleenmaid, says the company "took the decision" to use Nortel to provide all the data and communications infrastructure at the new building so there was "one point of contact and optimal compatibility between every part of the voice and data network."

"The Nortel PBX gives us the flexibility to slipstream our analogue fax lines into the IP infrastructure, and to activate GSM call functionality so staff can make a GSM call from their IP handsets or desktops and take advantage of the group call rates we get from our GSM service provider," said Ingram-Johnson.

"We're taking it one step at a time, and the solution we've chosen allows us to do that at a pace that suits our business, not the other way round," he says.

The solution he chose meets fulfils his feature requirements today, but allows the company to "activate new features as we grow without having to pay a premium for hardware upgrades," he said.

"In the future we'll be able to activate even more functionality, like call telephony integration between desktops and handsets so calls can be made from any device, and integrated call features like voicemail on the desktop and e-mail from the handset," says Ingram-Johnson.

"Also, once we equip our stores with IP PBXs, staff will be able to travel anywhere in the country and retain their own extension numbers and voicemail boxes.

"As companies grow, their communication networks need to scale and grow with them," says Nick Avakian, general manager, Enterprise Solutions, Australia and New Zealand, Nortel.

"While it's clear that IP is the new communications standard, many companies don't want or need every feature the technology enables. It's important therefore to find a solution that combines all the essential features of an IP PBX with the business-grade reliability of a PABX, that allows for new features to be switched on or off as needed."

www.nortel.com
www.commander.com

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