What is the difference between cloud solutions for a call center and a contact center?

The terms call center and contact center are often used interchangeably in practice, but they describe two fundamentally different modes of customer contact. And when considering cloud solutions for customer contact, it’s important to understand the difference so you can make the right choice for your organization. In this article, we explain the difference, discuss what cloud solutions are available, and help you determine which is best for your situation.

What is the difference between a call center and a contact center?

A call center, as the name implies, is entirely focused on telephone customer contact. Employees take incoming calls, make outgoing calls and handle customer inquiries over the phone. That’s it. No other channels are involved, and the focus is purely on voice communication.

A contact center goes a step further. In addition to telephony, a contact center supports other communication channels such as e-mail, chat, WhatsApp, social media and sometimes even video. Customers can choose how to contact them, and employees manage all those channels from one environment. The goal is a consistent customer experience, regardless of the channel the customer chooses.

So the difference is not only in technology, but also in strategy. A call center is reactive and single-channel. A contact center is proactive, omnichannel and better equipped for the expectations of the modern customer.

What are cloud solutions for a call center?

Traditional call centers ran on physical hardware: servers, phone systems and landlines that were all on-site. Cloud solutions for a call center replace this infrastructure with software available over the Internet. You no longer need expensive hardware, and employees can work from any location.

Typical cloud solutions for a call center include:

  • Cloud VoIP telephony: calls run over the Internet instead of traditional phone lines, saving costs and increasing flexibility
  • Interactive voice response (IVR) systems: automated menus that direct callers to the right department
  • Queuing and routing software: smart distribution of incoming calls to available employees
  • Call recording and reporting: insight into call volumes, wait times and employee performance

Cloud call center solutions are relatively easy to set up and suitable for organizations that want to be reached primarily by phone. However, they are limited if customers also want to contact them through other channels.

What are cloud solutions for a contact center?

Cloud contact center solutions go beyond telephony. They bring all communication channels together in one platform, eliminating the need for employees to switch between different systems. This is also known as omnichannel customer contact.

A modern cloud contact center solution usually provides:

  • Omnichannel management: telephony, email, chat, WhatsApp and social media in one overview
  • Uniform customer profiles: all interactions are linked to a single customer profile, so employees instantly know the context
  • AI support: smart suggestions, automatic call summaries and intelligent routing based on customer data
  • Real-time reporting: insight across all channels so management knows what’s going on
  • Integrations with CRM and other systems: customer data automatically flows into existing business systems
  • Self-service capabilities: chatbots and voicebots that can help customers outside business hours

Thanks to cloud telephony as part of a broader contact center platform, you no longer have to manage separate systems for each channel. Everything is connected, and you notice it immediately in the quality of the customer experience.

Which cloud solution is the best fit for your organization?

The choice between a cloud call center and a cloud contact center depends on a few practical questions:

  • Through which channels do your customers contact you now, and which channels do they expect to use in the future?
  • How big is your customer service team, and is it growing in the coming years?
  • Do you already have multiple systems for different channels, and does managing them take a lot of time?
  • Do you want to be able to support employees with AI, or is that not a priority for now?
  • Is it important for your management to combine reports across all channels?

If your organization is accessible almost exclusively by phone and wants to keep it that way, a cloud call center may be sufficient. But for most midsize and large organizations in 2026, customers contact you through multiple channels and expect consistency. In that case, a cloud contact center clearly offers more value.

What are the advantages of a cloud contact center over a call center?

Moving from a call center to a cloud contact center brings a number of tangible benefits:

  • Less repetition for customers: because all channels are linked to one customer profile, a customer does not have to retell their story when they switch from WhatsApp to phone
  • Better accessibility: customers can choose how to contact them, including outside business hours through self-service options
  • Higher efficiency for employees: everything is on one screen, allowing employees to help more quickly and in a more focused way
  • Management information across all channels: management gets a complete picture of customer contact, from wait times to customer satisfaction
  • Scalability: you easily add channels or employees without large hardware investments
  • Reduced operational costs: less time spent on call transfers, fewer errors due to fragmented systems and better employee utilization

In short, a cloud contact center solves many of the pain points that organizations experience with outdated or fragmented customer service software.

How do you switch from a call center to a cloud contact center?

A transition need not be a major disruption if you take a step-by-step approach. Some practical steps to make the transition go smoothly:

  1. Map your current situation: what systems are you using now, what channels are active and where are the bottlenecks in your current customer contact?
  2. Determine which channels have priority: don’t start with all channels at once, but choose the two or three that your customers use the most
  3. Choose a platform that integrates with your existing systems: a good cloud contact center connects to your CRM, ERP or other business software
  4. Involve your employees early in the process: technology only works if people want to work with it, so provide proper training and guidance
  5. Measure and optimize continuously: use your new platform’s reporting capabilities to see what is working and where there is still room for improvement

A good business analysis at the beginning of the process helps enormously. It allows you to bring bottlenecks into sharp focus and make the right choices for technology and implementation, without surprises later.

How Pegamento helps with cloud contact center solutions

We at Pegamento understand that moving from a call center to a cloud contact center raises questions. Not just about technology, but also about strategy, integrations and adoption. That’s why we offer everything under one roof, from consulting and implementation to management and support, without having to deal with multiple vendors.

What we can do for you:

  • Omnichannel customer contact through one platform: telephony, email, chat, WhatsApp and social media merged into one unified environment
  • Proprietary cloud telephony infrastructure: our Phone System is fully IP-based, scalable and easy to manage, including integrations with CRM and ERP
  • AI support for employees: smart routing, real-time suggestions and call summaries that make employees faster and more effective
  • No costly customization, but smart combination of proven modules: we build a customized solution with standard building blocks that are proven to work in your industry
  • Guidance from strategy to adoption: we help not only with technology, but also with channel strategy, training and continuous optimization

Wondering how your customer contact can be smarter and more efficient? Contact us and discover, together with our specialists, which cloud solution best suits your organization.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does a cloud contact center cost on average per month?

The cost of a cloud contact center varies widely depending on the number of employees, desired channels and the level of AI support. Most providers operate on a per-user-per-month subscription model, which makes costs predictable and scalable. Compared to traditional on-premise solutions, the total cost of ownership is often lower because you don't have to buy or maintain hardware.

Can employees also work from home with a cloud contact center?

Yes, that is precisely one of the biggest advantages of a cloud contact center. Because everything is available over the Internet, employees can log in to the same platform from any location and operate all channels as if they were in the office. All you need is a stable Internet connection and a headset, which makes hybrid and fully remote working easy.

On average, how long does the implementation of a cloud contact center take?

The lead time of an implementation depends on the complexity of your organization, the number of systems to be integrated and the channels you want to activate. A basic setup with telephony and one or two additional channels can be up and running within a few weeks, while a full omnichannel platform with CRM integrations and AI features typically takes two to four months. Proper preparation and a clear project scope significantly shorten the implementation time.

What are the most common mistakes when moving to a cloud contact center?

A common mistake is wanting to activate all channels at once, which leads to employee overload and a messy customer experience. Other pitfalls include underestimating the importance of training and adoption, and choosing a platform that does not integrate well with existing CRM or ERP systems. Therefore, always take a phased approach, involve employees early in the process and thoroughly test integration options beforehand.

Is a cloud contact center also suitable for smaller organizations or SMEs?

Absolutely. Modern cloud contact center solutions are modular, so you only pay for the functionality you actually need. A small team can start with telephony and chat, and later easily add WhatsApp or AI support as the organization grows. The low barrier to entry and lack of large hardware investments make cloud contact centers especially attractive to SMBs.

How do you ensure that the quality of customer contact goes up after the switch?

Quality improvement starts with actively using the reporting and analytics capabilities offered by a cloud contact center. Monitor KPIs such as first-contact resolution, average handling time and customer satisfaction scores by channel, and use this data to adjust processes. Combine this with regular coaching calls based on call recordings and AI-generated insights, so employees can continually grow in their roles.

What happens to existing phone numbers when moving to a cloud solution?

Existing phone numbers can, in almost all cases, be ported to a cloud platform through a process called number portability or number porting. This means that customers can simply continue to call the same number without the need to adjust your communications messaging. Discuss this in advance with your new provider so that the transfer is seamless and there is no interruption in reachability.

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