Most UCaaS Platforms Got One Critical Thing Wrong

And it’s costing businesses more than they realize.
There’s a quiet problem in modern business communications, one that most companies don’t notice until it’s too late.
On the surface, everything appears to be working. Teams are collaborating, meetings are running smoothly, and messages are flowing across the organization. From the outside, it looks like the promise of UCaaS (Unified Communications as a Service) has been fully realized.
But then something breaks.
A call drops at the wrong moment. A customer can’t get through. A critical conversation fails when it matters most. And in that instant, the reality becomes impossible to ignore:
-> Voice isn’t just another feature; it’s the one thing that cannot fail.
UCaaS Solved Collaboration, But Broke the Foundation
There’s no denying the impact UCaaS has had. It’s transformed how businesses communicate, making collaboration easier, enabling remote work, and bringing together tools that were once scattered across different systems.
But in the process, most platforms made a subtle and costly trade-off.
They were built around applications first.
Voice came later.
That decision doesn’t always show up immediately. In fact, early on, everything can seem perfectly fine. Over time, cracks begin to appear. Reliability becomes inconsistent. Visibility into performance is limited. Control starts to slip. And teams quietly begin working around the system instead of relying on it.
The issue isn’t obvious in a feature list. It doesn’t stand out in a demo.
It only becomes clear when communication actually matters.
The Gap Doesn’t Show Up Until It Matters Most
On paper, most UCaaS platforms look remarkably similar. They all offer calling, messaging, meetings, and integrations. From a buying perspective, it’s easy to assume the differences are minimal.
However, real-world performance doesn’t happen on paper.
It happens during peak call volumes, network fluctuations, and unexpected failures. It happens in moments where communication is critical.
How Businesses Compensate (And Why It Backfires)
When systems don’t fully meet expectations, businesses do what they always do: they adapt.
They introduce additional tools to fill the gaps:
-> MS Teams for collaboration
-> UCaaS for calling
-> Legacy PBX for critical sites where reliability can’t be compromised
Individually, each decision makes sense. Collectively, they create something else entirely.
The Real Outcome: Fragmented Communications
What began as an effort to simplify communication turns into a layered, fragmented environment. Teams find themselves navigating multiple systems, switching between tools, and managing increasingly complex workflows just to accomplish what used to be straightforward.
Costs rise. Visibility decreases. Control becomes harder to maintain.
And with every added layer, the margin for error grows.
At that point, the impact is no longer theoretical.
If messaging fails, work slows.
If voice fails, business stops.
This is a Foundation Problem
Most vendors approach communications from the top down. They focus on user experience, collaboration tools, and application layers, and only after that do they integrate voice into that model.
Sangoma approached it from the opposite direction.
Before UCaaS, before collaboration apps, Sangoma was already building the underlying systems that make communication possible:
-> Carrier-grade voice networks
-> SIP services
-> Telephony infrastructure
-> Managed connectivity
These weren’t add-ons; they were the starting point. That difference in approach isn’t cosmetic. It fundamentally changes how the system performs.
Why Foundation Changes Everything
Just like a house, when communication is built on a strong foundation, everything above it behaves differently.
Voice is more reliable because it isn’t competing for priority. Performance is consistent because it’s designed into the architecture. Failover isn’t a workaround; it’s part of the system. Integrations function as expected because they’re not being forced onto unstable layers.
Most importantly, businesses can build on top of that foundation without introducing risk.
What Businesses Are Actually Trying to Build
Organizations aren’t just implementing communication tools anymore. They’re building connected ecosystems that tie together customer experience, operations, and data.
They’re integrating AI-driven workflows, virtual agents, CRM and EHR systems, and industry-specific applications. They’re automating interactions and creating more responsive, intelligent environments.
But there’s still a critical dependency in all of this: everything relies on the stability of the foundation underneath.
What Happens When You Build on the Wrong Foundation
When advanced capabilities are layered onto systems that weren’t designed for them, the results aren’t always improvements. Sometimes, they’re amplifications of existing problems.
Bad foundation + AI = Bigger failures
->Poor routing becomes faster poor routing
->Bad data becomes automated bad decisions
-> Reliability issues become more visible and more frequent because more processes now depend on them
What was once an occasional inconvenience can quickly become a systemic issue.
The Right Way to Build Modern Communications
The most resilient systems follow a simple principle: start with what cannot fail.
Network.
Infrastructure.
Voice.
Once those are solid, everything else, collaboration, AI, automation, and integrations, can be layered on top with confidence.
That’s the model Sangoma was built on.
From Foundation to Flexibility
Because Sangoma controls the full communications stack, it enables a level of flexibility that goes beyond standard configurations that most vendors can’t…
-> True customization
Instead of forcing businesses into predefined workflows, solutions can be shaped around how organizations actually operate. Integrations can be tailored. Reporting can be customized. Deployments can scale across locations without introducing unnecessary complexity.
With Sangoma’s Professional Services team, solutions are tailored, and businesses can:
-> Integrate AI platforms and automation tools
-> Connect CRM, POS, and EHR systems
-> Customize workflows and routing
-> Build tailored reporting and analytics
-> Deploy across complex, multi-site environments
Built for Environments Where Failure Isn’t an Option
In some environments, communication issues are inconvenient. In others, they’re unacceptable.
-> Real-time coordination between care teams
-> Integration with EHR systems (Epic, Cerner, Athenahealth)
-> Secure, compliant communication (HIPAA-ready)
When communication fails, patient outcomes are impacted.
-> Guest services, reservations, and operations
-> PMS integrations for seamless workflows
-> Always-on connectivity across properties
When communication fails, guest experience suffers immediately.
Enterprise and Multi-Site Organizations
-> Distributed teams across locations
-> Complex network and routing requirements
-> Need for visibility and control
When communication fails, operations slow, or stop completely.
The Future of Communications Isn’t More Features
The industry is moving quickly. Every vendor is adding AI, automation, and integrations at an accelerating pace.
Those capabilities alone aren’t what will define the next generation of communications platforms.
The real differentiator is the foundation on which those capabilities are built on.
Why Sangoma
Most UCaaS vendors built collaboration platforms and worked to make them capable of handling voice.
Sangoma built voice first and then expanded outward.
It’s a different starting point; it leads to a different outcome.
Because when communication is built on a solid foundation, it doesn’t just work most of the time.
It works when it matters most.
Reach out to a Sangoma expert today to learn more.