Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager) vs. MicroSIP

Overview
ProductRatingMost Used ByProduct SummaryStarting Price
Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
Score 8.7 out of 10
N/A
Call Manager is a unified call control center from Cisco that supports enterprise collaboration functions across the spectrum of IP telephony, video & web conferencing, and messaging. Features include call forwarding, call back, call transfer, ad hoc conferencing, and call park.N/A
MicroSIP
Score 10.0 out of 10
N/A
N/A
$95
one-time fee
Pricing
Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)MicroSIP
Editions & Modules
No answers on this topic
Basic
$95
one-time fee
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)MicroSIP
Free Trial
NoNo
Free/Freemium Version
NoNo
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
NoNo
Entry-level Setup FeeNo setup feeNo setup fee
Additional DetailsMust contact sales team for pricing
More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)MicroSIP
Considered Both Products
Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
I would say it is a tie with IP office. This is also a complex solution that's usually managed by a service provider but offers high quality via phones that are excellent in sound quality and overall reputation for reliability.
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
Cisco Unified Communications Manager is a great competitor to Avaya Aura, whereas both solutions provide the client an Enterprise - Grade UC solution. I would prefer Cisco Unified Communications Manager because most corporate networks run on a Cisco backend core, and assigning …
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
CUBE is a robust gateway works in conjunction with Cisco Unified Communications Manager for providing PSTN calling facility. CUBE is easy to set up and manage and it has lots of security features. SRST is one of the best feature where in case of a network issue with the Cisco …
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
Avaya Aure requires lots of system maintenance and requirements. Also, Avaya cm does not have a graphical user interface. Avaya deployment requires lots of VMs and this is not acceptable for a clients 3CX is very cheap but they are very vulnerable to the attacks. Also they …
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
Avaya Aura
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
Overall Satisfaction with Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager) in general is more a telephony platform that a Unified Communications suite, but it could fit smaller companies or certain industries with specific requirements or needs, like hospitality.
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
Simple, all products mentioned were on-premise (that solution I used several years ago) Call manager is a cloud solution without hardware required.
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
As per the comments earlier, Cisco's focus has finally moved to Cloud and Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager) primarily stays as it solves specific business problems that Cloud-based platforms are trying to solve, slowly but surely. Cisco Unified Communications …
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
Most commonly used here in our country is Avaya; they pretty much do the same as the Cisco Unified Communications Manager. But for me, Cisco products are more reliable and tested so I prefer using this as our mode of communication for our entire organization. It keeps the …
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
The Cisco Call Manager application has been around for much longer than many of the competitors. As such, they have had plenty of time to resolve bugs and increase the feature set that comes natively with this solution. One of the biggest factors for us was the professional …
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
Avaya is extremely expensive for a corporate telephony infrastructure, its a product designed for the callcenter so it makes it even impossible to go with it for just corporate telephony.
Cisco Call Manager is not just cheaper but also much simpler to use.
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
Because of the complexity and quantity of users and remote offices distributed along several countries Cisco Unified Call Manager was the best option that suits all our needs and requirements also the most affordable alternative, and in terms of future projects the most robust …
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
We have been a Cisco based shop and have looked at other cloud voice options such as MS Teams pbx, and others, but ultimately, the features, endpoints, and reliability of Cisco has been the common factor in staying with them as our voice provider. Their integrations, room …
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
CUCM is actually our old system that we're currently transitioning away from. While CUCM certainly has more features than the Microsoft Teams phone system, and it's far more customizable, what we really needed currently was a cloud system that allowed more options for remote …
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
The number one point for which I would choose the Call Manager is because it has a wide level of scalability. You can have it in a company with 200 phones or up to 10000. In addition, Cisco TAC offers excellent support for when there is a disaster or you need to make some …
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
CUCM can grow to any scale you want. You can have a small amount of users, to tens of thousands of phones to support any size your company grows to. Toll bypass via routing calls over the WAN as well as an extensive Unity voicemail system allows for efficient routing of your …
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
We choose the Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager) for the following reasons:
1- Great features from the customer's perspective.
2- More stability and scalability for large companies
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
We've used 3Com/HP VCX before HP pulled the plug. Feature to feature, in some cases VCX did things better than Call Manager. VCX's GUI interface was very simple to navigate. Even over the years, VCX made it easy to train someone as an admin within a day and that person would be …
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
We had a great experience with Cisco IP phone communicator and this was the main reason why this new solution was purchased. Some members were more likely to purchase Skype for Business solutions but in the end, the good experience with Cisco solutions made the difference.
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
It was less expensive and we are able to change partners. Mitel's system is not very friendly for the customer who is tied to a poor vendor.
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
I've used CUCM and it's related products for over 25 years but in the middle of that time I managed a network that had hosted voip, so I know the difference. Hosted voip can't do literally everything like CUCM can do, but it's WAY simpler to operate and manage. Plus the end …
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
The lack of support partners for Skype for Business is one of the reasons CUCM stacks up against it. The software itself from MS is not bad, but it's hard to find support. Also, Cisco offers a full-stack solution in the same box, while the Skype for Business architecture is way …
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
We've had the system for a number of years and the technology has changed over that time. We anticipate this system will be functional for us for at least 10 years. At that time, we'll start evaluating new technology to see if the Opex model is better in the long run than the …
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
Ultimately it will come down to the administrator's preference. Cisco has led the market for some time. But Avaya continues to make advancements that are comparable to Cisco. Microsoft is also attempting to break into the market but does [not] have the end to end solution like …
Chose Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
No other evaluated solutions provided the required scale and availability in combination with the central solution approach. All other solutions required more onsite equipment to provide the same services or had issues to provide services on a global scale
MicroSIP
Chose MicroSIP
MicroSip is quite honestly the first call app that I have used which is integrated with a laptop but in terms of call quality and other features as mentioned such as VM, DND, call alerts, call log and caller ID these are all top notch. I would recommend MicroSip for any …
Features
Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)MicroSIP
Cloud PBX
Comparison of Cloud PBX features of Product A and Product B
Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
7.3
Ratings
9% below category average
MicroSIP
10.0
Ratings
22% above category average
Hosted PBX9.00 Ratings00 Ratings
Multi-level Interactive Voice Response (IVR)5.20 Ratings00 Ratings
User templates7.00 Ratings00 Ratings
Call reports6.90 Ratings10.00 Ratings
Directory of employee names8.60 Ratings10.00 Ratings
Call Management
Comparison of Call Management features of Product A and Product B
Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
8.2
Ratings
2% below category average
MicroSIP
10.0
Ratings
17% above category average
Answering rules9.00 Ratings10.00 Ratings
Call recording7.00 Ratings10.00 Ratings
Call park9.00 Ratings00 Ratings
Call screening8.10 Ratings10.00 Ratings
Message alerts8.10 Ratings10.00 Ratings
VoIP system collaboration
Comparison of VoIP system collaboration features of Product A and Product B
Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
8.3
Ratings
4% above category average
MicroSIP
-
Ratings
Video conferencing8.60 Ratings00 Ratings
Audio conferencing8.60 Ratings00 Ratings
Video screen sharing7.00 Ratings00 Ratings
Instant messaging9.00 Ratings00 Ratings
Mobile apps
Comparison of Mobile apps features of Product A and Product B
Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)
8.0
Ratings
1% above category average
MicroSIP
-
Ratings
Mobile app for iOS8.00 Ratings00 Ratings
Mobile app for Android8.00 Ratings00 Ratings
Best Alternatives
Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)MicroSIP
Small Businesses
CloudTalk
CloudTalk
Score 7.2 out of 10
CloudTalk
CloudTalk
Score 7.2 out of 10
Medium-sized Companies
CloudTalk
CloudTalk
Score 7.2 out of 10
CloudTalk
CloudTalk
Score 7.2 out of 10
Enterprises
Cisco Business Edition 7000 (discontinued)
Cisco Business Edition 7000 (discontinued)
Score 9.0 out of 10
Cisco Business Edition 7000 (discontinued)
Cisco Business Edition 7000 (discontinued)
Score 9.0 out of 10
All AlternativesView all alternativesView all alternatives
User Ratings
Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)MicroSIP
Likelihood to Recommend
8.5
(0 ratings)
10.0
(0 ratings)
Likelihood to Renew
10.0
(0 ratings)
-
(0 ratings)
Usability
9.0
(0 ratings)
-
(0 ratings)
Support Rating
8.0
(0 ratings)
-
(0 ratings)
Implementation Rating
10.0
(0 ratings)
-
(0 ratings)
User Testimonials
Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Call Manager)MicroSIP
Likelihood to Recommend
The Cisco Unified Communications Manager platform would be most suited for the below scenarios. 1. An organization with very restricted policies and compliance where can't move to cloud-based solutions for data security. They can install the CUCM on-premises. 2. An organization that is still on a legacy phone system could adopt CUCM to save costs and have better services.
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MicroSip integrates calls through my laptop, which is especially convenient and allows for continuity of my work so I can answer or make calls while updating notes or checking emails. It is particularly accurate with caller ID, call log and VM and DND features. Overall I enjoy using it and believe it is a beneficial tool to use as opposed to conventional calling.
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Pros
  • Customizability - The program allows for a lot of specific features and ways to use the program.
  • Traditional - The system is a very traditional phone system, with everything you would expect and need from an enterprise phone system.
  • Expandable - The system allows from a small amount of users to a large amount, with no upper limit.
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  • Facilitates an accurate call log
  • Allows call pop ups
  • VM and DND features
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Cons
  • CUCM is overly complex and requires a very capable engineer to maintain it. Similarly, implementing anything new requires a great deal of specialized knowledge of CUCM.
  • CUCM is difficult to troubleshoot because of it's complexity.
  • CUCM is expensive licensing and they nickel and dime you with a plethora of tiny little license charges for every little feature. They have the most convoluted licensing models, ever, for their CU products in general.
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  • Thus far I have not encountered any issues with MicroSip so I am unable to comment in this area.
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Likelihood to Renew
We have been using this product for 20+ years and will continue too. This is a great product and new features are always coming out.
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No answers on this topic
Usability
Although it's very easy to use, once you understand the concepts of IP telephony, as I said before, I think Cisco could have improved the management interface of the platform, adding modern technologies and the design language of the other platforms like DNA Center, etc. This interface hasn't had a substantial improvement for about 10 years
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No answers on this topic
Support Rating
CUCM is supported by most third-party vendors for related products, so it makes finding solutions to specific needs easy. Also Cisco TAC is very knowledgeable, and we have never run into a problem they have not been able to resolve. Usually they are resolved without the need to escalate tickers either.
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No answers on this topic
Implementation Rating
This was the first phone system we implemented that could span multiple locations. We were very satisfied once fully implemented
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No answers on this topic
Alternatives Considered
The Cisco Call Manager application has been around for much longer than many of the competitors. As such, they have had plenty of time to resolve bugs and increase the feature set that comes natively with this solution. One of the biggest factors for us was the professional services/support that comes along with using any Cisco product.
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MicroSip is quite honestly the first call app that I have used which is integrated with a laptop but in terms of call quality and other features as mentioned such as VM, DND, call alerts, call log and caller ID these are all top notch. I would recommend MicroSip for any organization looking to save time.
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Return on Investment
  • Return on Investment as one shot investment was made then only licensing contract renewing is needed.
  • Virtualized environment and centralized administration tools.
  • Money saving as a result on using features like TEHO.
  • Business continuity assured on environments with SRST and Multi site Deployment with Distributed Call Processing.
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  • Time Saving
  • Accurate Call Alerts
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ScreenShots