The market for cloud solutions for customer contact has grown tremendously in recent years. There are dozens of platforms, combinations of tools and vendors all claiming to be the best choice for your organization. But how do you actually compare these solutions in a meaningful way? In this article, we’ll get you started with a practical approach so you can make an informed choice that fits your situation. If you first want a broader overview of what’s available, take a look at the customer contact solutions available to Dutch organizations.
What exactly are cloud solutions for customer contact?
Cloud solutions for customer contact are software platforms that run your customer service entirely over the Internet, without the need for heavy hardware or in-house server infrastructure. Instead of a traditional on-premises phone system, you manage everything from a Web browser or app. That includes telephony, chat, e-mail, WhatsApp and social media.
The big advantage is flexibility: you scale up or down based on busyness, employees can work anywhere, and updates are made automatically. For organizations with substantial contact volume, this means a fundamental shift in how you organize and manage reachability.
What types of cloud contact center solutions exist?
Not all cloud contact center solutions are the same. Roughly speaking, you distinguish three categories:
- CCaaS (Contact Center as a Service): A fully cloud-based contact center platform that brings all channels together. Think omnichannel routing, reporting, workforce management and AI features in one environment.
- Cloud telephony (VoIP): A cloud-based telephony system that replaces traditional phone lines. Ideal if you primarily want to modernize the telephony component without immediately redesigning the entire contact center.
- Specialized tools: Separate applications for specific functions, such as a chatbot, a knowledge base or an email handling tool. You can integrate these with existing systems, but they require good links to be effective.
Which type suits you best depends on the scale of your customer contact, the complexity of your processes and the extent to which your systems are already integrated.
What should you look for when comparing cloud solutions?
When comparing customer contact software, there are a few criteria that really matter:
- Channel support: Does the platform support all the channels your customers use, including phone, chat, WhatsApp, email and social media?
- Integration capabilities: Can the solution interface with your existing CRM, ERP or other systems? Poor integrations lead to fragmented information and additional operations for employees.
- Scalability: Does the platform grow with your organization without having to launch a large project with every expansion?
- Security and compliance: Especially for Dutch organizations, AVG compliance and data location are important. Do you process customer data within the Netherlands or the EU?
- Ease of use for employees: A platform that employees do not understand or are not comfortable working on will not produce results, no matter how advanced it is.
- Reporting and insight: Can you measure what’s happening in your customer contact? Good data is the basis for improvement.
What is the difference between an all-in-one platform and separate tools?
This is one of the most decisive choices when comparing omnichannel customer contact solutions. An all-in-one platform brings all functionality together in one environment. Employees work from one screen, data flows seamlessly, and reports provide a complete picture. That sounds ideal, and for many organizations it is.
Separate tools offer more flexibility: you choose the best solution for each function and link them together. But those links are exactly where it often goes wrong. Systems do not communicate well with each other, employees have to switch between multiple applications, and management has no central overview. This is a common pain point at organizations that have built their customer contact from separate components.
An all-in-one approach requires a supplier that is broad-based and can deliver everything under one roof. That significantly reduces the complexity of supplier management and gives you a single point of contact for the whole thing.
How do you compare the cost of cloud customer contact solutions?
Comparing costs in cloud telephony and contact center solutions is trickier than it seems. The license price is only part of the story. Also note:
- Implementation costs: What will the initial setup, migration of existing data and integration with other systems cost?
- Training costs: How much time and money goes into training employees?
- Management and support: Are updates, management and support included, or do you pay for them separately?
- Hidden costs: Consider additional costs for additional channels, higher user numbers or additional modules.
- Total Cost of Ownership (TCO): Calculate the total cost over a period of three to five years, not just the first year.
A cheaper solution on paper may end up being more expensive if you need many separate integrations, or if you depend on outside parties for every customization. Custom solutions with standard building blocks, cleverly combining proven modules, often offer the best balance between flexibility and controllability of costs.
What questions do you ask a cloud customer contact vendor?
A good supplier for contact center solutions in the Netherlands is transparent and will help you make the right choice, even if that sometimes means a simpler solution is a better fit. In any case, ask these questions:
- What does the implementation process look like, and who will guide us through it?
- How are links to our existing systems achieved?
- Where is our data stored, and does it comply with the AVG?
- What does the platform’s roadmap look like for the next few years?
- Who is our point of contact after implementation, and how is support arranged?
- Can we do a demo or pilot before making a final choice?
The answers to these questions will give you a good idea of how a supplier works and whether the partnership will work well in the long run.
How Pegamento helps choose the right cloud solution for customer contact
We understand that comparing cloud solutions for customer contact can feel overwhelming. There are many options, many promises and many vendors who claim to offer exactly what you need. Our approach is different: We always start with a thorough analysis of your situation before recommending a solution.
What we can do for you:
- An independent business analysis that pinpoints your customer contact bottlenecks
- An integrated platform that merges telephony, omnichannel communications and AI functionality so employees work from a single screen
- Customized solutions with standard building blocks, without costly customization, but with the result that does fit your processes
- Everything under one roof: from strategy and implementation to management, training and support, with one point of contact
- A proprietary, fully Dutch cloud telephony system that meets the highest security and AVG compliance requirements
Want to know which solution best suits your organization? Contact us and we will be happy to think with you without any obligation.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does an average implementation process for a cloud contact center solution take?
The lead time varies greatly depending on the complexity of your organization and the number of systems to be connected. A basic implementation of a cloud telephony or CCaaS solution typically takes four to 12 weeks. If you have a lot of custom integrations or a large migration of existing data, this can add up to six months or more. Always ask your vendor for a detailed project plan with clear milestones so you know what to expect.
What if our employees work remotely - does a cloud solution work just as well as in the office?
Yes, that's precisely one of the biggest advantages of cloud-based customer contact solutions. Employees only need a stable Internet connection and a headset to be fully operational regardless of their location. Quality of voice and access to all channels and data are identical to the situation in the office. Just be sure to agree on minimum Internet speed and home network security to ensure both quality and AVG compliance.
We already use a CRM system such as Salesforce or Microsoft Dynamics - how difficult is it to connect it?
Most modern CCaaS platforms offer standard connectors for popular CRM systems such as Salesforce, Microsoft Dynamics and HubSpot. Through these off-the-shelf integrations, employees see customer information directly on their screens when a call or chat comes in, without having to switch between applications. Less common or highly customized CRM environments may require customization - ask your vendor explicitly about this and preferably have the integration tested early on in the process.
How do I know if a CCaaS platform is scalable enough for our growth?
Ask the vendor for concrete reference cases from organizations similar to the size you're aiming for, not just your current situation. In addition, look at the licensing structure: can you easily add users and channels without starting a new implementation project? A properly scalable platform lets you scale up and down based on seasonal peaks or growth, without contractual or technical barriers.
What are the most common mistakes when switching to a cloud customer contact solution?
The biggest pitfall is focusing on the license price without considering the total cost over several years, including integrations, training and management. Another common mistake is involving employees too late in the selection and implementation process, causing adoption to lag and the platform to be underutilized. Finally, organizations regularly underestimate how long a data migration process takes - plan ample time for this and test extensively before going live.
Is a cloud solution also suitable for smaller organizations, or is it only interesting for large contact centers?
Cloud solutions for customer contact are also very suitable for smaller organizations, because you pay for what you use and do not have to invest in expensive hardware or server infrastructure. Many platforms offer entry-level models that grow with your organization. It is wise, however, to carefully map out in advance what functionality you really need, so that you don't pay for extensive modules that you won't use for the time being.
How do I ensure that the transition to a new platform has the least possible impact on our customers?
A phased migration is in most cases the safest approach: first run the new platform in parallel with the existing system and only switch over completely when everything has been tested and proven. Make sure employees are trained well before going live and that additional support is available during the first few weeks. Communicate the schedule clearly internally and designate an internal project manager to serve as a point of contact for both the team and the vendor.


