<
communications> (CTI or "- Telephony -") Enabling computers
to know about and control telephony functions such as making
and receiving voice,
fax, and data calls,
telephone
directory services, and
caller identification. The
integration of
telephone and
computer systems and is a major
development in the evolution of the automated office.
CTI is not a new concept - such links have been used in the
past in large
telephone networks - but only dedicated call
centres could justify the costs of the required equipment
installation. Primary
telephone service providers are now
beginning to offer information services such as {Automatic
Number Identification} and {Dialled Number Identification
Service} on a scale wide enough for its implementation to
bring real value to business or residential
telephone usage.
A new generation of applications (
middleware) is being
developed as a result of standardisation and availability of
low cost
computer-telephony links. This can link {personal
computers} with telephones and/or a local area server with a
PBX. Leading telephony and
software vendors such as
AT&T,
British Telecom,
IBM,
Novell,
Microsoft and
Intel are developing better telephony services and
capabilities which should eventually enable low cost CTI.
The main
CTI functions are integrating
messaging with
databases,
word processors etc.; controlling voice,
fax,
and
e-mail messaging systems from a single {application
program}; graphical call control - using a {graphical user
interface} to perform functions such as making and receiving
calls, forwarding and conferencing; call and
data
association - provision of information about the caller from
databases or other applications automatically before the call
is answered or transferred;
speech synthesis and {speech
recognition}; automatic logging of call related information
for invoicing purposes or callback.
Typical productivity benefits are improved customer service;
increased productivity; reduced costs; enhanced workflow
automation; protected investment in computers and telephony;
computerised telephony intelligence.
IBM were one of the first with workable CTI, now sold as
"CallPath".
Callware's
Phonetastic is typical of the new
breed of
middleware.
CTI came out of the 1980s call centre boom, where it linked
central servers and
IVRs with
PBXes to provide call
transfer and
screen popping. In the 1990s, efforts were
made by several vendors, such as IBM, Novell
TSAPI and
Microsoft
TAPI, to provide a version for
desktop computers
that would allow control of a desktop
telephone and assist in
hot desking.
Desktop CTI was made obsolete by the mobile phone revolution,
e-mail and, above all,
VoIP, and CTI has never advanced
outside the call centre.
See also
Telephony Application Programming Interface.
(2003-12-04)