Hosted IVR is a cloud-based solution that a vendor operates and maintains. The system resides on the vendor’s servers and is delivered over an internet connection, requiring no hardware or software on your end.
That’s just one of many reasons hosted IVR is the ideal system for most companies. Here are nine more.
With a hosted IVR service, you don’t have to worry about testing, debugging, or troubleshooting your IVR system ever again. That’s a huge timesaver when you consider that IVR testing is absolutely critical to ensuring your VoIP phone system performs consistently, handles call volumes properly, integrates correctly with backend systems, and remains secure.
Even minor bugs or configuration issues could lead to callers trapped in endless menu loops or unable to access the information they need.
Even if you’re tech-savvy, performing regular tests on your phone system can take hours and hours out of your schedule. To test your IVR system thoroughly, you’d need to run through every possible call flow, simulate different input volumes, check for cross-platform compatibility, validate that any new integrations are performing — and that’s just the beginning.
In other words, testing your phone system should not be another casual item on your to-do list. Many businesses choose to outsource this rigorous testing process to professionals who specialize in IVR quality assurance for this exact reason, but that adds yet another recurring cost that cuts into savings from managing your own IVR.
If you have a talented QA and developer team, running these tests in-house could be a viable option. But for most companies, having the IVR vendor handle testing as part of their hosted offering alleviates this headache entirely.
One of the biggest advantages of using a hosted IVR service is avoiding the heavy up-front costs required for an on-premises system.
With a self-managed IVR, you need to make major investments right out of the gate for hardware like specialized servers, telephony cards, power backups, etc. You’ll also need to purchase costly software licenses for the IVR platform itself and complementary components like speech recognition engines.
On top of that are the expenses for phone lines, SIP trunks, and any necessary data/telecom cabling.
That’s hard on the wallet, especially for smaller businesses or those just starting to implement IVR capabilities. With a hosted IVR solution, the service provider supplies and maintains all of the underlying infrastructure within their cloud environment.
There are always exceptions. Large enterprises with complex IVR needs and deep pockets may prefer the control and customization possibilities of an on-prem system. But for the vast majority of businesses, hosted IVR is both budget-friendly and powerful enough to get the job done.
An often overlooked but critically important benefit of cloud-hosted IVR is the ability to scale resources up or down alongside your business growth.
With on-premises IVR, your phone systems are limited by the fixed compute capacity, telephony ports, and licenses you’ve provisioned. So if call volumes spike unexpectedly, you’re stuck either letting those calls go unanswered or rushing to buy and install more hardware and software.
Neither of these is a great way to run a business at scale.
On the other hand, a hosted IVR provides virtually unlimited scalability. Whether you need to handle double the call traffic for a big sales event, add interactive voice capabilities to a new product line, or spin up an IVR for a short-term campaign, your hosted service can instantly provision more concurrent sessions, speech recognition channels, database connections, and processing power from the cloud platform’s elastic resources.
The best part is you can scale down just as quickly. This kind of flexibility helps startups and mid-sized businesses avoid the wasteful overhead of an on-prem system while maintaining the same quality of customer support.
Have you ever bought a brand-new phone only for a newer model to be released a few months later? These same problems exist in the IVR space, too.
IVR vendors are constantly releasing new versions with security patches, bug fixes, updated integration APIs, and feature enhancements.
But applying these updates is no simple task. If you’re using an IVR system at scale, system updates require careful testing in a staging environment, coordinating change controls, and scheduling disruptive downtime to install the new updates.
With hosted IVR, the service provider handles updating all software and underlying cloud infrastructure components behind the scenes.
The latest IVR software versions, integrated AI/speech capabilities, and security updates are all applied seamlessly with no effort or downtime for you.
The only edge case here would be if your business is dependent on heavily customized versions of legacy IVR platforms. In this scenario, self-hosting may provide you with more control over how you time your updates.
But for most organizations, the “future-proof” nature of a hosted IVR’s automatic updates is far more convenient.
When an on-premises IVR system goes down, it can bring your entire operation to a grinding halt. Incoming calls get rejected, frustrated customers can’t get issues resolved, and chaos ensues.
A hosted IVR service, by its very nature, has robust disaster recovery capabilities built into its architecture from the ground up.
This is because the service providers have already made multi-million dollar investments into geo-redundant data centers, failover systems, and backup processes on your behalf.
The only exception would be for businesses where uptime is absolutely paramount. For these companies, self-hosting and owning every redundancy component may make more sense.
But for most businesses, the built-in disaster recovery capabilities provided by a hosted IVR platform are a huge advantage over going it alone.
Not to mention, there’s the human component. Most reputable hosted services have teams of experts managing these recovery procedures. In other words, you can rest easy knowing your critical IVR communications will be secure and always available.
One unavoidable challenge with running any on-premise system is the inevitability that the technology you’re using will become obsolete over time.
The hardware and software you’ve invested so much of your capital into will very likely one day become outdated, unsupported, and incompatible with modern systems and standards.
By partnering with a hosted service provider, your business doesn’t have to pour money into depreciating assets. Instead, you can lean on your provider to supply you with the vendor’s latest software versions, security updates, and IVR compliance certifications.
That said, you should still conduct due diligence when selecting a hosted IVR vendor.
But in general, a hosted IVR solution can be a better long-term investment because you don’t have to worry about the hardware or software you’re using becoming outdated.
For businesses leveraging several cloud applications and services, integrating those systems with an on-premises IVR can be an uphill battle.
You’re forced to constrain the integration possibilities based on the IVR platform’s antiquated APIs and connectivity methods. And connecting to these cloud apps requires complex secure tunnels, brittle VPNs, and inefficient batch data syncing processes.
A hosted IVR that lives natively in the cloud significantly simplifies this. Most providers expose APIs, web service connectors, and pre-built adaptors for commonly integrated cloud applications like CRMs, contact center platforms, analytics tools, and more.
As a result, your data can flow seamlessly between your IVR and other cloud services over secure internet paths.
This ease of integration provides a number of key benefits — faster deployment timelines, the ability to leverage emerging cloud innovations, and the elimination of fragile legacy connectors.
There are still scenarios where an on-prem IVR is preferable — like if you have heavily customized legacy systems running behind the firewall with proprietary protocols.
The effort it would take to adapt those to cloud integration may be excessive.
However, for the majority of businesses embracing the cloud, having an IVR that natively integrates with your other cloud tools is a major advantage.
One of the most frustrating aspects of managing an on-premises IVR system is the wildly unpredictable costs that vary from year to year, much like how gas and energy bills can go up or down throughout the seasons.
The only difference is that IVR systems are more expensive — much more expensive.
The large up-front hardware and licensing expenses are just the start. You’ll also have to budget for ongoing maintenance, future upgrade charges, telecom connectivity fees, baseline support costs, training on new releases, and any required professional services to support your self-hosted system.
There are also a few cases that can completely blow your IVR budget. Server failure and increases in vendor pricing can make it difficult to forecast and allocate your IVR spending accurately.
A hosted IVR service, on the other hand, eliminates these budgeting headaches by providing a predictable, utility-based pricing model with transparent monthly costs. No surprise fees — just a dependable operating expense.
With an on-premises IVR system, any configuration changes, call flow updates, or administrative tasks require hands-on access to the physical hardware and software running within your data center or server rooms. This severely limits who can manage the IVR and from where.
Only a few people, usually in central IT, have the system authority and access required to make these changes. And if updates are required while someone is traveling or critical issues arise during off-hours, you’re forced to wait.
With hosted, cloud-based IVRs, your teams can access them from anywhere through the provider’s web-based management interfaces and APIs. Through these interfaces, your authorized administrators can conveniently make changes, monitor performance, access logs, and handle any IVR tasks remotely.
Outsourcing the level of administration is an IVR best practice your teams should be following.
For example, your marketing teams could quickly update prompts and menu options for new campaigns, and developers could test integrations without needing to head on-site.
And while there are certainly compliance and security considerations to having this remote “cloud keys” access, most reputable hosted providers come with robust authentication, encryption, and audit trails to protect this level of access.
If you’re a growing organization that needs to stay focused on your customers, stakeholders, or donors, you shouldn’t be bogged down managing telecom infrastructure.
By offloading your IVR burdens to a hosted provider, you can stay focused on your business and keep your organization connected with zero distractions.