Large enterprises are increasingly adopting Unified Communications as a Service (UCaaS). The cost savings of a single cloud platform for voice, video, messaging, and conferencing are clear. But companies are also discovering less obvious benefits.
Cloud migration is now essential for data and request strategies at large organizations. Gartner says cloud adoption is ”becoming a necessary component for building business competitiveness.” This aligns with the trend of combining dialog methods to better manage diverse service needs and client expectations.
Is your association looking for tools to improve scalability, customer outcomes, internal collaboration, and brand communication? UCaaS can address these concerns without disrupting current operations.
Behind the UCaaS boom with large organizations
Since 2020, UCaaS adoption has surged in both the public and private sectors, especially among large organizations. The global UCaaS market was valued at $49 billion in 2023 and is projected to reach $216 billion by 2032. Fortune Business Insights predicts the large enterprise segment will drive much of this growth.
UCaaS offers more for less. Instead of separate devices for voice, video, and messaging, it integrates everything into one cloud-based platform. This minimizes IT demands while providing a seamless, multi-channel experience.
“Unified Communications brings together all the various forms of communication,” explains sandra Krief, Senior vice President for Service Providers at RingCentral. “Gone are the days of needing multiple vendors and applications that each operate in their own silos and don’t communicate with each other.”
This coordination creates synergy, allowing large businesses to incorporate specific communication services and solutions. Cloud hosting allows for updates and expansion without major capital expenditures or organizational changes.
Internal advantages: Achieving collaboration quickly
UCaaS is well-suited for larger enterprises because it easily adapts to constant growth and change. The larger the organization, the more vulnerable it becomes to
