Call Flow
The configured path a call takes through your phone system, starting from the moment it's answered by the auto-attendant, through any menus or queues, to the final destination. Designing a good call flow is one of the most impactful things you can do for caller experience.
Call Forwarding
Redirecting incoming calls to a different number such as a mobile phone, another extension, or voicemail. Can be set unconditionally, on no-answer, on busy, or when out of coverage. A basic feature included on every VoIP platform.
Call Parking
Placing a call on hold in a shared "parking lot" so another employee can pick it up from a different phone or extension. Common in retail, hospitality, and healthcare environments where staff move around.
Call Queue
A virtual waiting line that holds incoming callers when all agents or employees are busy. Callers hear hold music or a message and are connected to the next available person. Queue management, including overflow rules and callback options, is a key differentiator between basic VoIP and full UCaaS platforms.
Call Recording
The automatic or on-demand recording of phone calls for quality assurance, compliance, training, or documentation purposes. Cloud-based recording is included on mid-tier and above plans for most UCaaS providers. Storage duration and access controls vary significantly.
Call Screening
The ability to see who is calling and decide how to handle it before answering. Options typically include sending to voicemail, answering, or forwarding. Some systems announce the caller's name and reason for calling to the receiving employee before connecting.
CCaaSContact Center as a Service
Cloud-based contact center software delivered on a subscription basis. Includes advanced ACD, agent dashboards, workforce management, quality monitoring, and omnichannel (voice, chat, email, social) capabilities. Distinct from UCaaS, though some providers like 8x8 and RingCentral offer both on one platform.
CDRCall Detail Record
A data file that captures metadata about every call, including caller ID, called number, duration, time, and result. CDRs are used for billing reconciliation, usage analysis, and compliance reporting.
CLICaller Line Identification
The phone number displayed to the person receiving your call. In VoIP, CLI can be set to show your main business number regardless of which extension or device is making the call, so your outbound identity stays consistent.
Cloud PBX
A Private Branch Exchange hosted in the cloud rather than on-premises hardware. The provider manages the infrastructure; you access it via the internet. Effectively synonymous with hosted VoIP for most business buyers. See also: Hosted PBX.
Codec
Software that compresses and decompresses audio for transmission over the internet. Different codecs trade off audio quality vs. bandwidth consumption. G.711 delivers high quality but uses more bandwidth; G.729 compresses more aggressively but can reduce quality on poor connections.
CPaaSCommunications Platform as a Service
A cloud platform that lets developers embed real-time voice, SMS, video, and messaging capabilities directly into their own applications via APIs, without building telecom infrastructure. Twilio is the most well-known example. Different from UCaaS, which is a packaged end-user product.
CTIComputer Telephony Integration
The integration between a phone system and a computer application, most commonly a CRM like Salesforce. CTI enables click-to-dial, automatic screen pops (pulling up the caller's record when a call comes in), and automatic call logging after the call ends.
Click-to-Call
A feature that lets website visitors or CRM users initiate a phone call by clicking a button or phone number. No manual dialing required. Powered by WebRTC or a CTI integration. Widely used in sales workflows to increase outbound call volume and in customer support to reduce friction for inbound inquiries.
Conference Bridge
A dedicated dial-in number that allows multiple participants to join a single audio call simultaneously. Each participant dials the bridge number and enters a PIN or meeting code. Standard on most UCaaS platforms; some providers include unlimited conference bridges, others charge per use or require a higher tier.