10-13-2011 12:25 PM - edited 03-16-2019 07:29 AM
Hello everyone,
Can someone give me a basic primer for being a SIP provider? As an example, if I have a CoLo at a central site and have a customer across town what are the major components and equipment for providing them SIP service at the remote site so that they can dial out to the PSTN from the central site? Call Manager would be centralized at the CoLo.
Off hand I think I will need the phone at the remote site, a connection (Metro E, point to point, etc) from the remote to central site. I am a bit fuzzy at that point? How do they get out to the PSTN? Do I need PRIs at the central site or is it some type of other connectivity?
Not asking for a detailed diagram, just the basics.
Thanks in advance All replies rated
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10-15-2011 01:01 PM
What you are describing is a hosted UC service. Cisco has some documentation around their own offering that may give you some insight. Start here:
As a thought exercise, we can explore this some. You would clearly need to provide call processing at your fictitious data center. You may also need to provide basic applications such as voicemail. Multitenant features in CUCM and Unity Connection can be leveraged to create a robust and secure solution.
For PSTN connectivity, you will need to hand off to a PSTN carrier in some way. It could be a SIP trunk, PRI, etc. Which means you have to manage the costs related to managing and provisioning. You also need to reliably provide services such as 911. This will be a huge consideration. You can't just hand off a 911 call to the PSTN and assume that everything works. You have to route emergency calls to the correct PSAP. By correct I mean route calls to the PSAP that services the area where your fictitious customer sites reside. There are lots of regulatory considerations around this topic. You would need to do more research. Perhaps google search "
E911 hosted IP PBX".
As far as network connectivity between the hosting facility and the customer prem. This is basic networking 101. You would likely partner with some MPLS provider that has a POP in your fictitious data center and then have some sort of mutual service offering. Maybe you could establish agreements with multiple MPLS providers?
You could also think about using customer prem equipment (CPE). Where you drop off a multi-service router of some type that can provide local PSTN connectivity (working around your 911 issue, perhaps) and other security-centric services. Value add for your overall solution perhaps.
Those are my random thoughts on the topic.
HTH.
Regards,
Bill
Please remember to rate helpful responses and identify
10-15-2011 01:01 PM
What you are describing is a hosted UC service. Cisco has some documentation around their own offering that may give you some insight. Start here:
As a thought exercise, we can explore this some. You would clearly need to provide call processing at your fictitious data center. You may also need to provide basic applications such as voicemail. Multitenant features in CUCM and Unity Connection can be leveraged to create a robust and secure solution.
For PSTN connectivity, you will need to hand off to a PSTN carrier in some way. It could be a SIP trunk, PRI, etc. Which means you have to manage the costs related to managing and provisioning. You also need to reliably provide services such as 911. This will be a huge consideration. You can't just hand off a 911 call to the PSTN and assume that everything works. You have to route emergency calls to the correct PSAP. By correct I mean route calls to the PSAP that services the area where your fictitious customer sites reside. There are lots of regulatory considerations around this topic. You would need to do more research. Perhaps google search "
E911 hosted IP PBX".
As far as network connectivity between the hosting facility and the customer prem. This is basic networking 101. You would likely partner with some MPLS provider that has a POP in your fictitious data center and then have some sort of mutual service offering. Maybe you could establish agreements with multiple MPLS providers?
You could also think about using customer prem equipment (CPE). Where you drop off a multi-service router of some type that can provide local PSTN connectivity (working around your 911 issue, perhaps) and other security-centric services. Value add for your overall solution perhaps.
Those are my random thoughts on the topic.
HTH.
Regards,
Bill
Please remember to rate helpful responses and identify
10-15-2011 02:21 PM
Bill,
Can't tell you how much I appreciate the reply! I am hear trying to learn and build my skill sets and hopefully one day start answering questions instead of just asking them. If you are even in Atlanta I owe you a lunch!
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