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Explore articles from Intuity Communications on PSTN replacement, unified communications, contact centres, cyber security, managed IT, AI, connectivity and business mobile.
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02 June 2026
PSTN Switch-Off 2027: What UK Businesses Need To Do Now
Prepare your business for the UK PSTN switch-off in January 2027. Learn what needs replacing and how Intuity can help you move safely to VoIP.
The UK’s traditional Public Switched Telephone Network, often called the PSTN, is being retired. Services that still depend on old analogue lines, ISDN, Featureline, multiline services and certain broadband connections are expected to stop working from 31 January 2027 unless they are moved to an IP-based alternative.
For many businesses, this is not just a phone system change. PSTN and ISDN lines are often connected to other services that are easy to forget, including alarms, lift lines, door entry systems, payment terminals, fax machines, broadband circuits and emergency phones.
That means the safest approach is not to wait until the final deadline. A good migration starts with finding every service that uses a legacy line, understanding what it does, and planning the correct replacement.
What is the PSTN switch-off?
The PSTN switch-off is the move away from older copper-based telephone services towards digital services that run over internet connections.
Instead of using a traditional phone socket, businesses will use options such as:
- Hosted cloud telephony
- SIP trunks
- Microsoft Teams Phone
- UCaaS platforms
- Hybrid systems that connect existing PBX equipment to modern SIP services
- Fibre, Ethernet or business broadband connectivity
The right option depends on the size of the business, the age of the current phone system, call volumes, resilience needs and whether the company wants to keep handsets, move to softphones or use Microsoft Teams for calling.
What could stop working?
Businesses should not only look at desk phones. PSTN and ISDN lines can sit quietly in the background for years.
- Main business phone lines
- ISDN circuits
- Fax lines
- Alarm lines
- Lift emergency phones
- Payment terminals
- Door entry systems
- Broadband services linked to copper voice lines
Why businesses should act early
Leaving the migration too late creates risk. Number porting can take time. Legacy systems may need hardware upgrades. Broadband or Ethernet circuits may need lead time. If alarms or lift phones are involved, third-party suppliers may also need to test replacement services.
Acting early gives the business time to:
- Audit every line
- Confirm what each number is used for
- Identify unused or duplicate services
- Choose the right replacement
- Test call routing
- Confirm emergency call location information
- Build resilience into the design
- Reduce unnecessary monthly costs
VoIP, SIP or cloud telephony: which is best?
There is no single answer for every business.
A smaller business may choose a fully hosted cloud phone system because it is quick to deploy and easy to manage. A larger organisation may prefer SIP trunks into an existing PBX if it wants to keep current call flows, handsets and contact centre services. A Microsoft 365-heavy organisation may want Microsoft Teams Phone, either with Operator Connect, Calling Plans or Direct Routing.
For many organisations, the best answer is hybrid. This allows the business to keep parts of the current system while moving lines, numbers and users to modern IP-based services in stages.
What should a PSTN migration plan include?
- Line audit
- Number audit
- System review
- Connectivity review
- Emergency calling review
- Resilience design
- Porting plan
- Testing
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications helps businesses move from legacy phone lines to modern cloud, SIP and hybrid voice services. We can review your existing estate, identify hidden line dependencies and recommend a migration path that fits your business.
Our experience covers traditional PBX platforms, Avaya systems, Microsoft Teams Phone, cloud telephony, SIP trunks, contact centres, connectivity and business continuity. That means we can support both simple and complex migrations.
Key takeaway
The PSTN switch-off is not just a telecoms deadline. It is a business continuity issue. The sooner you audit your lines and plan the move, the easier it is to avoid rushed decisions, service disruption and unnecessary cost.
01 June 2026
Microsoft Teams Phone, UCaaS or Hybrid PBX: Which Is Right For Your Business?
Compare Microsoft Teams Phone, UCaaS and hybrid PBX options for UK businesses. Learn which solution fits your users, calls and growth plans.
Business phone systems have changed quickly. Many organisations are moving away from traditional PBX systems and choosing cloud telephony, Microsoft Teams Phone or a hybrid model that keeps existing systems connected while modernising services.
The right answer depends on how your people work, how your customers contact you and how much control you need over call routing, resilience, reporting and integrations.
Option 1: Microsoft Teams Phone
Microsoft Teams Phone is a strong option for businesses that already use Microsoft Teams every day. It brings calling into the same platform people use for meetings, chat, file sharing and collaboration.
It can be delivered in different ways, including Microsoft Calling Plans, Operator Connect or Direct Routing.
Best for:
- Microsoft 365 users
- Office-based and remote teams
- Businesses that want one interface for meetings, chat and calling
- Companies with simple to moderate call handling needs
- Organisations that want to reduce separate phone system use
Teams Phone may not be the best fit on its own for complex contact centre requirements, advanced call recording, detailed call reporting or highly customised call flows. In those cases, it may need to be combined with a specialist contact centre platform or a managed voice provider.
Option 2: UCaaS
UCaaS stands for Unified Communications as a Service. It usually includes cloud calling, messaging, video, voicemail, mobile apps, call routing and administration from one online platform.
UCaaS is often the best fit for businesses that want a complete communications platform without running on-premise phone system hardware.
Best for:
- Growing businesses
- Multi-site organisations
- Remote and hybrid teams
- Companies that want predictable monthly costs
- Businesses moving away from older PBX systems
- Users who need desk phone, softphone and mobile app options
Typical benefits:
- Easier user management
- Flexible call routing
- Lower hardware dependency
- Better remote working support
- Faster onboarding for new starters
- Built-in business continuity options
- Integration with CRM or productivity tools, depending on the platform
Option 3: Hybrid PBX
A hybrid PBX approach keeps parts of the existing phone system while adding SIP trunks, cloud services, Microsoft Teams integration or contact centre upgrades.
This is often a sensible option when a business has invested heavily in an existing Avaya, Mitel, Cisco or similar platform and does not want to replace everything at once.
Best for:
- Larger businesses with complex call flows
- Organisations with existing PBX investment
- Businesses with contact centres
- Companies with sites that need staged migration
- Businesses that need to keep specialist handsets, paging, door entry or analogue devices
Typical benefits:
- Lower disruption
- Gradual migration
- Better control over timing
- Reuse of existing equipment
- Ability to test new services before full rollout
- More flexibility for complex environments
What should businesses consider before choosing?
- Number of users
- Number of sites
- Current phone system
- Existing contracts
- Call volumes
- Contact centre needs
- Call recording requirements
- Compliance requirements
- Internet connectivity
- Resilience and failover
- Mobile working needs
- Microsoft 365 licensing
- Number porting requirements
A platform that looks cheaper at first may not be the best value if it lacks reporting, call control, support or resilience.
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications helps businesses compare Microsoft Teams Phone, UCaaS and hybrid telephony options without pushing a one-size-fits-all answer.
We can review your current setup, explain the options clearly and design a solution that fits your users, sites, customer service needs and budget.
Key takeaway
Choose Microsoft Teams Phone if your business is already Microsoft-led and wants calling inside Teams. Choose UCaaS if you want a full cloud communications platform. Choose hybrid PBX if you need to modernise without losing the value and control of your existing system.
31 May 2026
Business Connectivity And Resilience: Why Your Phone System Is Only As Strong As Your Network
Learn why reliable connectivity, failover and network design are essential for VoIP, UCaaS, Teams Phone and cloud contact centres.
Modern business communications depend on connectivity. Cloud phone systems, Microsoft Teams Phone, SIP trunks, video meetings, contact centres, CRM systems and remote working tools all need a reliable network.
That means voice quality is no longer just about the phone system. It is also about broadband, leased lines, Wi-Fi, routers, switches, firewalls, power and failover.
If the network fails, cloud calling can fail with it.
Why connectivity matters for VoIP and cloud telephony
VoIP calls travel over data connections. If the connection is unstable, users may experience:
- Poor call quality
- One-way audio
- Dropped calls
- Delays
- Robotic voice
- Failed registrations
- Contact centre disruption
- Missed customer calls
A business-grade voice service needs the right network underneath it.
What affects call quality?
The main technical factors are bandwidth, latency, jitter and packet loss.
In plain English:
- Bandwidth – how much data your connection can carry
- Latency – delay between sending and receiving voice
- Jitter – variation in packet timing
- Packet loss – missing voice data
These issues are often caused by overloaded broadband, poor Wi-Fi, old routers, bad cabling or no traffic prioritisation.
Resilience matters more after the PSTN switch-off
With old analogue lines, voice services often had separate power and network behaviour. With digital voice and cloud telephony, calls normally depend on broadband and local equipment.
For businesses, this highlights an important point: voice resilience needs to be designed. It should not be assumed.
What should a resilient voice design include?
- Primary business broadband, Ethernet or leased line
- Backup broadband or 4G/5G failover
- Quality routers and firewalls
- SIP-aware configuration where needed
- Power backup for routers, switches and phones
- Call forwarding rules during outages
- Cloud auto attendant and voicemail failover
- Mobile app access for key staff
- Separate connectivity for critical sites
- Regular testing
Connectivity options for businesses
Business broadband can be suitable for smaller sites or backup services. It is cost-effective but may not offer the same service levels as Ethernet.
FTTP can offer better speed and reliability than older copper-based services, depending on availability.
Ethernet or leased line provides a dedicated connection with stronger service levels and is often used for larger offices, contact centres or sites where uptime is critical.
4G or 5G failover can help keep phones, card payments or cloud services running if the main connection fails.
SD-WAN can help route traffic intelligently across different connections for organisations with multiple sites and resilience requirements.
Why voice and connectivity should be planned together
Many businesses buy cloud telephony first and think about connectivity afterwards. A better approach is to review both together.
Questions to ask include:
- How many users make calls at the same time?
- Does the site run video meetings?
- Are there contact centre agents?
- Is Wi-Fi used for calling?
- Are remote users included?
- What happens if broadband fails?
- What happens during a power cut?
- Are customer calls business critical?
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications provides voice, connectivity, UCaaS, contact centre and managed technology support. This means we can design the phone system and the network together.
We can review your current services, recommend suitable connectivity, build in failover and help ensure your communication services are ready for modern cloud working.
Key takeaway
A cloud phone system is only as reliable as the network it uses. Businesses moving to VoIP, UCaaS, Teams Phone or CCaaS should review connectivity and resilience before problems affect customers.
30 May 2026
How AI Is Changing Contact Centres Without Removing The Human Touch
Learn how AI can improve contact centres with smarter routing, agent support, reporting and customer experience without losing human service.
AI is becoming a major part of modern customer service, but the goal should not be to remove people from every conversation. The best use of AI in a contact centre is to help customers get answers faster and help agents do their jobs better.
For many businesses, the contact centre is where customer experience is won or lost. If calls are routed badly, agents cannot find information, or managers cannot see what is happening, customers quickly lose confidence.
AI can help solve these problems when it is introduced carefully.
What does AI do in a contact centre?
AI can support many areas of customer service, including:
- Call and chat routing
- Agent assistance
- Automatic call summaries
- Knowledge base search
- Customer sentiment analysis
- Quality monitoring
- Forecasting and scheduling
- Self-service chatbots
- Post-call analysis
- Trend reporting
This does not mean every customer should be pushed into a bot. It means simple tasks can be handled faster, while more complex or sensitive conversations reach the right person sooner.
The biggest benefits of AI in customer service
- Faster answers for customers – AI can search knowledge articles, previous cases and approved responses while the agent is speaking to the customer.
- Better support for agents – AI can reduce admin by generating call notes, summarising conversations and suggesting next steps.
- Improved consistency – customers receive more consistent answers when agents use the same approved knowledge base.
- Better visibility for managers – AI can help managers spot repeated issues, common complaints, training gaps and customer sentiment trends.
- Smarter self-service – AI can improve chatbots and automated journeys when they are built around real customer questions and clear escalation routes.
AI should support people, not replace service
Customers still want human help when the issue is urgent, emotional, complicated or high value. Businesses should avoid using AI as a barrier that stops customers reaching a person.
A good AI-enabled contact centre should make it easier to reach the right outcome. That may mean a chatbot for simple questions, an agent for complex support, or an automated summary that saves the agent time after the call.
What is the role of CCaaS?
CCaaS stands for Contact Centre as a Service. It is a cloud-based platform for managing customer conversations across channels such as voice, email, web chat, SMS, social messaging and video.
A modern CCaaS platform can help businesses bring customer conversations into one place. This makes AI more useful because it has better context across channels.
Questions to ask before adding AI
- What problem are we trying to solve?
- Which tasks are repetitive?
- Where do customers experience delays?
- What information do agents struggle to find?
- Which channels do customers use most?
- How will customers reach a human when needed?
- How will we measure success?
- Who owns the knowledge base?
- How will we protect customer data?
AI works best when the business already understands its customer journeys.
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications helps businesses review their contact centre, customer experience and communications platforms. We can help you understand whether AI, CCaaS, omnichannel routing, call recording, analytics or Microsoft Teams integration would improve your service.
We work across cloud, hybrid and on-premise environments, so we can help modernise your customer experience at the right pace.
Key takeaway
AI can make contact centres faster, smarter and easier to manage, but it must be introduced with care. The best results come when AI supports agents, improves visibility and gives customers a clearer route to the right answer.
29 May 2026
Cyber Essentials, MFA And Passkeys: A Practical Guide For UK Businesses
A plain English guide to Cyber Essentials, MFA and passkeys for UK businesses that want stronger protection and simpler security.
Cyber security does not need to be confusing, but it does need to be taken seriously. Many attacks still succeed because of weak passwords, missing updates, poor access controls or users being tricked by phishing emails.
For UK businesses, Cyber Essentials provides a practical baseline. It focuses on core controls that reduce common cyber risks, including secure configuration, access control, malware protection, software updates and firewalls.
Why MFA matters
MFA stands for multi-factor authentication. It means users need more than just a password to log in. This might include an app approval, security key, passkey or biometric check.
MFA is important because stolen passwords are still one of the easiest ways for attackers to access business systems. If a password is guessed, reused or stolen, MFA adds another layer of protection.
Not all MFA is equal
Some MFA methods are stronger than others.
Text message codes are better than using only a password, but they are not the strongest option. App-based prompts, number matching, hardware security keys and passkeys can offer better protection.
The best approach depends on the organisation, systems, users and risk level.
What are passkeys?
Passkeys are a newer way to sign in without relying on traditional passwords. They can use biometrics, device-based approval or cryptographic authentication.
For businesses, passkeys are worth considering as part of a wider move towards stronger identity and access management.
What does Cyber Essentials expect?
A practical Cyber Essentials readiness plan should include:
- MFA for cloud services
- Strong password and access policies
- Secure user account management
- Removal of unused accounts
- Regular patching
- Malware protection
- Firewall controls
- Secure device setup
- Backups
- Evidence and documentation
Common mistakes businesses make
- Users sharing accounts
- Admin rights being given too widely
- Old user accounts staying active
- MFA missing from email or cloud systems
- Devices not being patched
- Unsupported software still being used
- Backups not being tested
- No clear leaver process
- Weak passwords reused across services
These issues are fixable, but they need ownership and regular review.
Cyber security is not just an IT issue
Cyber security affects operations, finance, customer trust and reputation. A successful attack can stop staff working, interrupt customer service, expose data and create legal or compliance problems.
That is why business leaders should treat cyber security as part of normal business risk management, not just a technical task.
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications supports businesses with cyber security, Microsoft 365 security, MFA, access control, secure communications, managed IT and user protection.
We can help review your current position, identify gaps and create a practical improvement plan that fits your business.
Key takeaway
MFA, passkeys and Cyber Essentials are not just security buzzwords. They are practical ways to reduce risk, protect users and make it harder for attackers to access your systems.
14 February 2026
The PSTN Switch-Off Is Nearly Here: What UK Businesses Need To Do Now
The UK’s traditional analogue phone network is being retired, and businesses that still rely on PSTN or ISDN lines need to act now.
The UK’s traditional analogue phone network is being retired, and businesses that still rely on PSTN or ISDN lines need to act now.
For many organisations, the switch-off is not just a phone system issue. PSTN lines are often hidden in business operations. They may support door entry systems, CCTV, alarms, emergency phones, EPOS devices, franking machines, lifts or legacy broadband.
What should businesses check?
- Office phone systems
- Alarm and monitoring lines
- Lift emergency phones
- Payment terminals
- Fax machines
- Broadband circuits
- Door entry and access control
- Legacy devices
Once identified, each service should be matched to a replacement. For voice calls, that usually means a hosted VoIP, cloud phone system or UCaaS platform. For broadband, it may mean moving to fibre, leased lines, SoGEA or another modern connectivity service.
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help businesses review existing lines, identify hidden PSTN dependencies and move to reliable digital alternatives with a clear migration plan.
22 January 2026
Unified Communications In 2026: Why Businesses Need More Than A Phone System
Business communication has changed. Teams now work across offices, homes, customer sites and mobile devices. A traditional phone system is no longer enough.
Business communication has changed. Teams now work across offices, homes, customer sites and mobile devices. A traditional phone system is no longer enough.
Unified Communications brings voice, video, messaging, presence, call recording, analytics and collaboration tools into one joined-up platform.
What is Unified Communications?
- Cloud phone system
- Business mobile integration
- Video meetings
- Team messaging
- Voicemail to email
- Call routing
- Auto attendants
- Reporting and analytics
A cloud-based UC platform can reduce reliance on old phone hardware and make it easier to manage users across different locations.
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications helps businesses choose, deploy and manage UCaaS solutions that fit the way their teams work.
08 November 2025
Cyber Security Is Now A Board-Level Business Risk
Cyber security is no longer just a technical issue for the IT department. It is a business risk that affects finance, operations, reputation, compliance and customer trust.
Cyber security is no longer just a technical issue for the IT department. It is a business risk that affects finance, operations, reputation, compliance and customer trust.
Common risks for businesses
- Phishing emails
- Weak passwords
- No multi-factor authentication
- Unpatched software
- Unsecured remote access
- Poor backup processes
- Lack of staff training
A sensible cyber security plan should include prevention, monitoring and recovery. That means protecting devices, securing email, training users, applying updates, backing up data and having a plan for what happens if something goes wrong.
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can support businesses with cyber security reviews, endpoint protection, email security, managed firewalls, backup, monitoring and practical advice.
03 September 2025
Managed IT Services: Why Reactive Support Is No Longer Enough
Many businesses still treat IT as something to fix only when it breaks. In 2026, that approach is becoming risky.
Many businesses still treat IT as something to fix only when it breaks. That approach is becoming risky because modern organisations depend on cloud platforms, email, connectivity, mobile devices and cyber security tools.
What does managed IT include?
- Helpdesk support
- Device management
- Microsoft 365 support
- Security patching
- Backup management
- Endpoint protection
- Email security
- User setup and removal
Reactive IT support only deals with problems after they have affected users. Proactive support aims to reduce those problems in the first place.
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications provides managed IT support designed to keep businesses secure, connected and productive.
17 June 2025
AI In Telecoms: Practical Ways Businesses Can Use AI Without Losing Control
AI is becoming one of the biggest topics in telecoms. But for many businesses, the real question is not whether AI is exciting. It is whether AI can solve everyday communication problems.
AI is becoming one of the biggest topics in telecoms. But for many businesses, the real question is not whether AI is exciting. It is whether AI can solve everyday communication problems.
Where AI can help in telecoms
- Call transcription
- Call summaries
- Sentiment analysis
- Intelligent call routing
- Customer service automation
- Quality monitoring
- Reporting and trend analysis
AI also creates risks. Businesses need to think about data protection, customer consent, staff training, access controls and where information is stored.
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications helps businesses understand where AI can add value across telecoms, contact centres and managed IT.
11 March 2025
AI In Contact Centres: Better Customer Service Without Removing The Human Touch
AI is changing contact centres quickly. It can help answer common questions, summarise calls, support agents and analyse customer conversations.
AI is changing contact centres quickly. It can help answer common questions, summarise calls, support agents and analyse customer conversations.
The best contact centres are not replacing people with technology. They are using AI to help people deliver better service.
What AI can do in a contact centre
- Summarising customer calls
- Suggesting next steps to agents
- Routing customers to the right team
- Detecting customer sentiment
- Automating simple queries
- Reducing after-call admin
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications helps businesses design contact centre solutions that combine automation, reporting, routing and human support.
29 October 2024
Contact Centres In 2026: The Shift From Call Handling To Customer Experience
The contact centre has changed. It is no longer just a team answering calls. It is often the main point where customers judge the quality of a business.
The contact centre has changed. It is no longer just a team answering calls. It is often the main point where customers judge the quality of a business.
What customers expect now
- Shorter waiting times
- Clear call routing
- Consistent service across channels
- Easy escalation
- Human help when needed
Older contact centre systems can make it difficult to see real-time performance, support remote agents or connect different customer channels.
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications helps businesses move from basic call handling to modern contact centre platforms.
16 May 2024
Internet Connectivity: Why Reliable Broadband Is Now Business-Critical
Reliable internet connectivity is now one of the most important services in any business.
Reliable internet connectivity is now one of the most important services in any business.
Cloud phones, Microsoft 365, CRM systems, payment platforms, video meetings, contact centres, remote access, cyber security tools and customer portals all depend on stable connectivity.
What options should businesses consider?
- Full fibre broadband
- SoGEA broadband
- Leased lines
- Ethernet services
- 4G or 5G backup
- SD-WAN
- Managed Wi-Fi
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can review your current connectivity, identify risks and recommend suitable options for your sites.
07 December 2023
Microsoft Teams Phone And Cloud Calling: Is Your Business Ready To Move?
Many businesses already use Microsoft Teams for meetings and messaging. The next step is often to bring business calling into the same environment.
Many businesses already use Microsoft Teams for meetings and messaging. The next step is often to bring business calling into the same environment.
Microsoft Teams Phone and cloud calling can help organisations reduce reliance on traditional phone systems, simplify user experience and support hybrid working.
What needs to be planned?
- Current numbers
- Call flows
- Hunt groups
- Auto attendants
- Reception needs
- Contact centre needs
- Connectivity
- User training
- Number porting
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help review your current phone system and assess whether Microsoft Teams Phone is the right fit.
21 April 2023
Business Mobile, 5G And Secure Remote Working: What To Review In 2026
Business mobile is no longer just about calls and data. Mobile devices are now part of the core workplace.
Business mobile is no longer just about calls and data. Mobile devices are now part of the core workplace.
Employees use mobiles for email, Teams, cloud apps, customer calls, authentication, file access and remote working.
Why mobile needs more attention
- Poor visibility of users and costs
- Unused or unmanaged SIMs
- Weak mobile security
- Inconsistent device policies
- Risk from lost or stolen devices
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help businesses review mobile contracts, improve visibility, manage devices and support secure remote working.
14 March 2024
Cloud Communications For Education: Helping Schools Stay Connected Across Sites
Schools and education providers rely on clear communication every day.
Schools and education providers rely on clear communication every day. Parents need quick updates, staff need to collaborate across departments, and leadership teams need reliable ways to manage calls across different buildings or sites.
Key benefits for schools and colleges
- Smarter call routing for reception and departments
- Voicemail to email for quicker follow-up
- Multi-site management for academy trusts
- Flexible working for senior leadership teams
- Better resilience than older on-site systems
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help schools, colleges and academy trusts review their current phone systems and move to a cloud communications platform that supports daily operations, safeguarding and long-term flexibility.
22 September 2023
Cloud Phone Systems For Medical Practices: Improving Patient Access
Medical practices depend on reliable communication.
Medical practices depend on reliable communication. Patients need to book appointments, request information and speak to the right team quickly.
Benefits for medical practices
- Call queuing
- Appointment line routing
- Recorded messages for common information
- Voicemail to email
- Call analytics
- Remote working for admin teams
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help medical practices design cloud communications that improve patient access while supporting security, resilience and day-to-day usability.
8 February 2025
Cloud Communications For Legal Firms: Keeping Client Conversations Secure And Accessible
Legal firms rely on clear, professional and secure communication.
Legal firms rely on clear, professional and secure communication. Clients expect quick responses, confidential handling and easy access to the right solicitor or support team.
Key benefits for legal practices
- Direct dial numbers for fee earners
- Voicemail to email
- Mobile and desktop calling
- Reception call routing
- Multi-office call management
- Better visibility of missed calls
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help legal firms move from older phone systems to cloud-based communications that support client service, hybrid work and professional call handling.
17 November 2024
Cloud Calling For Finance Firms: Supporting Compliance, Clients And Hybrid Teams
Finance firms need reliable communication.
Finance firms need reliable communication. Whether dealing with clients, lenders, advisers, insurers or internal teams, calls need to be handled professionally and securely.
Benefits for finance businesses
- Secure business calling from desktop and mobile
- Call recording where required
- Client call routing
- Voicemail to email
- Multi-office management
- Business continuity during disruption
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help finance firms choose and deploy cloud calling solutions that support client service, hybrid working and operational control.
5 June 2023
Cloud Communications For Retail: Connecting Stores, Head Office And Customers
Retail businesses need quick, reliable communication between customers, stores, suppliers and head office.
Retail businesses need quick, reliable communication between customers, stores, suppliers and head office.
Benefits for retail businesses
- Store-to-store calling
- Centralised call routing
- Customer service call handling
- Seasonal user changes
- Multi-site reporting
- Business mobile integration
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help retail businesses move to cloud communications that support stores, head office and customer service teams.
19 January 2026
Cloud Phone Systems For Hospitality: Helping Hotels, Restaurants And Venues Stay Responsive
Hospitality businesses depend on fast, friendly communication.
Hospitality businesses depend on fast, friendly communication. Hotels, restaurants, pubs, event venues and leisure businesses all need to respond quickly to customers.
Benefits for hospitality businesses
- Booking line routing
- Auto attendants
- Call queuing
- Voicemail to email
- Call overflow between sites
- Mobile app calling for managers
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help hospitality businesses improve call handling, bookings and multi-site communication with cloud phone systems.
27 April 2024
Cloud Communications For Estate Agents: Managing Property Enquiries More Effectively
Estate agents need to respond quickly.
Estate agents need to respond quickly. A missed call can mean a missed valuation, viewing or instruction.
Benefits for estate agencies
- Branch call routing
- Mobile app calling
- Voicemail to email
- Missed call visibility
- Multi-branch management
- Better customer follow-up
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help estate agents create a flexible cloud communications setup that supports branches, mobile teams and customer enquiries.
3 August 2025
Cloud Contact Solutions For Charities: Supporting Donors, Volunteers And Service Users
Charities need communication systems that are reliable, affordable and easy to manage.
Charities need communication systems that are reliable, affordable and easy to manage.
Benefits for charities
- Helpline call routing
- Volunteer coordination
- Donor enquiry handling
- Remote working
- Voicemail to email
- Call reporting
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help charities choose cloud communications that support service users, volunteers and fundraising teams while keeping systems simple to manage.
11 December 2023
Cloud Communications For Manufacturing: Keeping Production, Office And Field Teams Connected
Manufacturing businesses need communication that works across offices, warehouses, production areas, suppliers and field teams.
Manufacturing businesses need communication that works across offices, warehouses, production areas, suppliers and field teams.
Benefits for manufacturers
- Office and warehouse call routing
- Supplier communication
- Customer service lines
- Mobile access for managers
- Multi-site connectivity
- Business continuity planning
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help manufacturing businesses modernise communications across sites, departments and mobile teams.
16 February 2026
Cloud Communications For Construction: Connecting Sites, Offices And Mobile Teams
Construction businesses work across changing locations.
Construction businesses work across changing locations. Teams may be split between head office, live sites, temporary offices, vehicles and subcontractor networks.
Benefits for construction businesses
- Calls between office and site teams
- Mobile access for project managers
- Temporary site office numbers
- Supplier and contractor communication
- Voicemail to email
- Easy setup for new sites
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help construction firms build cloud communication solutions that support office teams, project managers and site workers.
18 December 2024
How Intuity Is Helping Businesses Make Sense Of AI In Communications
AI is now appearing in many business communication tools, but it does not need to be confusing.
AI is now appearing in many business communication tools. It can summarise meetings, help with call notes, improve customer service, support contact centre agents and make reports easier to understand.
For many businesses, this sounds useful, but also slightly overwhelming. At Intuity Communications, our role is to help customers look beyond the hype and understand where AI can genuinely help.
AI should solve real problems
The best place to start is not the technology. It is the problem.
Keeping things simple for users
New technology only works if people feel comfortable using it. That is why Intuity focuses on clear advice, simple setup and practical training.
27 January 2025
Microsoft Teams, Copilot And The Future Of Everyday Business Calls
Many businesses already use Microsoft Teams. The next step is using Teams and AI to make daily calling easier.
Many businesses already use Microsoft Teams for meetings and internal messages. The next step is using Teams as part of the phone system.
This is where newer AI features can make a real difference. AI can help with call notes, summaries, follow-up actions and clearer meeting records.
Where Intuity fits in
Moving voice into Microsoft Teams is not just a software change. Businesses still need to think about phone numbers, call queues, auto attendants, reception routing, recording, emergency calling, devices, headsets and connectivity.
12 March 2025
How AI Is Improving Contact Centre Support Without Removing People
AI can help contact centre agents work faster while keeping people at the centre of customer service.
Contact centres are under pressure. Customers expect quick answers, staff need better information and managers need clearer reporting.
AI is helping contact centres improve, but the aim should not be to remove people from customer service. The better approach is to help people work more effectively.
Helping agents during calls
AI can help agents by suggesting information, summarising conversations, reducing after-call notes and helping them find the right answer faster.
30 April 2025
Why AI Security Is Becoming Part Of Every Technology Conversation
As businesses adopt AI tools, security needs to be part of the plan from the beginning.
AI can help businesses work faster, but it also creates new questions.
What data is being used? Who can access it? Where is information stored? Are staff using approved tools? Could sensitive information be copied into the wrong place?
What businesses should think about
- Which AI tools are approved
- What data staff can use
- Whether customer information is protected
- How access is controlled
- Whether activity can be monitored
16 June 2025
Smarter Meeting Rooms: How AI Is Improving Hybrid Working
AI meeting room technology can make hybrid meetings clearer, easier and more natural for everyone.
Hybrid working is now normal for many businesses. Some people are in the office, some are at home and some are joining from customer sites or on the move.
The challenge is making meetings feel natural for everyone. This is where smarter meeting room technology can help.
Better sound and clearer video
Newer meeting room devices can reduce background noise, frame speakers more clearly and make it easier for remote attendees to follow the conversation.
5 August 2025
AudioCodes, Teams Voice And The Move Towards AI-Ready Calling
Businesses using Microsoft Teams still need reliable voice services, number management and careful planning.
Many organisations want to use Microsoft Teams as the main place for communication. But business calling needs more than a simple app.
Companies still need reliable voice services, number management, call routing, resilience and support for different types of users.
Intuity’s role
Intuity Communications helps businesses understand whether Teams voice is right for them and what needs to be in place before moving.
19 September 2025
How Gamma And Cloud Providers Are Making Communications More Flexible
Cloud communication providers are adapting as businesses look for smarter, more flexible tools.
Business communication is becoming more flexible. Companies want cloud calling, contact centre tools, mobile integration, better reporting and easier ways to support hybrid teams.
Why flexibility matters
Businesses do not all work in the same way. Some need a simple cloud phone system. Others need contact centre features, call recording, mobile integration, secure connectivity or support across several sites.
11 November 2025
Why AI Is Changing Cyber Security Support For Businesses
AI is helping security tools spot threats faster, but businesses still need clear advice and human judgement.
Cyber attacks are becoming more complex. Businesses are also using more cloud systems, more mobile devices and more online tools than ever before.
AI is now being used in cyber security to help spot threats faster and reduce the time it takes to investigate issues.
Human judgement still matters
AI can support cyber security, but people still need to make decisions. A business needs someone to review alerts, understand the risk and decide what action to take.
20 January 2026
How AI Is Helping Contact Centres Manage Busy Periods
AI and smarter workforce tools can help contact centres plan staffing and manage customer demand.
Most contact centres have busy periods. These may happen during sales campaigns, service outages, seasonal demand, product launches or billing cycles.
When call volumes rise, customers can wait longer and staff can feel under pressure.
Better planning for managers
Workforce management tools help contact centre managers understand demand, plan staffing and manage shifts. AI can support this by helping managers spot patterns and prepare for busy times.
7 April 2026
The Next Step For Business Technology: Connected, Secure And Easier To Use
The next stage of business technology is about joining systems together and making them easier to use.
The latest technology trends all point in the same direction. Businesses want systems that are connected, secure and easier to use.
They do not want separate tools that create more admin. They want phones, meetings, contact centres, cyber security, connectivity and IT support to work together properly.
Intuity’s approach
Intuity Communications helps businesses bring technology together in a practical way. That may include cloud voice, Microsoft Teams Phone, contact centre solutions, cyber security, managed IT, mobile, connectivity and meeting room technology.
12 May 2026
PSTN Switch-Off: Why 2026 Is The Year To Finish Your Migration Plan
The old analogue phone network is being retired, and businesses should use 2026 to check every system that still depends on traditional lines.
The UK’s old analogue phone network is coming to the end of its life. This is often called the PSTN switch-off. PSTN stands for Public Switched Telephone Network, which is the traditional copper-based phone network that has supported landlines, alarm lines, lift phones and many older services for decades.
For many businesses, the move away from PSTN is not just about replacing desk phones. It is about checking every system that may still rely on an analogue line. That could include alarms, payment terminals, door entry systems, fax machines, emergency phones, broadband circuits and older phone systems.
The move to digital voice is already well under way. Businesses that wait too long may find themselves under pressure to make quick decisions, which can increase the risk of disruption.
Why this matters now
Some organisations have already moved their main office phone system to the cloud but still have older lines hidden elsewhere. These lines can be easy to miss because they may not be used every day.
For example, a lift phone may only be used in an emergency. An alarm line may only activate when there is a fault or a security event. A fax line may still sit quietly in the corner of an office. These are exactly the kinds of services that can create problems if they are not reviewed properly.
The risk is simple. If a service relies on an old analogue line and that line is withdrawn or becomes unreliable, the service may stop working.
What should businesses check?
A sensible PSTN review should cover every site, not just head office. It should include:
- Office phone systems
- Alarm and monitoring lines
- Lift emergency phones
- Payment terminals
- Door entry systems
- CCTV lines
- Fax machines
- Broadband services
- Remote offices
- Warehouses
- Temporary sites
The key point is to avoid assuming that a line is only used for normal phone calls. Many businesses discover lines that are linked to systems they had forgotten about.
What replaces PSTN?
For voice services, many businesses are moving to VoIP, which stands for Voice over Internet Protocol. This simply means phone calls travel over an internet connection rather than a traditional phone line.
Other options include hosted phone systems, cloud communications platforms, Microsoft Teams Phone, SIP services and unified communications platforms.
For broadband and data services, businesses may need to review options such as SoGEA, FTTP, leased lines, Ethernet or 4G and 5G backup. The right option depends on how important the service is, how many users rely on it and whether the business needs resilience.
Why planning matters
A rushed migration can create avoidable problems. Phone numbers may need to be moved. Call routing may need to be rebuilt. Staff may need training. Connectivity may need upgrading. Some systems may need testing with new digital services.
A planned project gives the business time to check what it has, agree what needs replacing and move services in a controlled way.
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help businesses audit existing lines, identify hidden PSTN dependencies and move services to suitable digital alternatives.
This may include cloud voice, Microsoft Teams Phone, SIP, connectivity, backup circuits and support for specialist services such as alarms, lifts and access control.
If your business still has analogue lines, now is the right time to review them. Speak to Intuity Communications about a PSTN readiness check.
8 May 2026
AI In Cyber Security: Helpful Defence Tool Or New Business Risk?
AI is helping businesses improve cyber security, but it is also giving criminals new ways to create convincing attacks.
Artificial intelligence is changing cyber security in two very different ways.
On one side, AI can help businesses detect threats faster, review large amounts of data and improve security monitoring. On the other side, criminals are using AI to create more convincing phishing emails, fake voices, deepfake videos and faster attacks.
This means AI is not just a future topic. It is already part of everyday cyber security planning.
Why AI makes phishing more dangerous
Phishing is when a criminal tries to trick someone into clicking a link, opening an attachment, sharing a password or making a payment.
In the past, phishing emails were often easier to spot. They might include poor spelling, strange formatting or an unusual tone. AI has changed that. Attackers can now create emails that look more professional, sound more natural and appear to match the way a real supplier, colleague or customer might write.
This makes staff awareness more important, not less. Staff still need to question unusual requests, especially when they involve money, passwords, customer data or urgent action.
Deepfakes and voice fraud
AI can also be used to create fake voice or video content. This is often called a deepfake. In a business setting, a deepfake might be used to pretend to be a director, finance contact, supplier or customer.
This does not mean every business needs to panic. It does mean businesses need simple verification processes. For example, if a payment request is unusual, staff should confirm it using a trusted phone number or an agreed internal process.
AI can also help defenders
The good news is that AI can help businesses improve protection. Security tools can use AI to spot unusual behaviour, detect suspicious patterns and help teams respond more quickly.
For small and medium-sized businesses, this can be useful because they may not have a large internal security team. Managed security services can help monitor systems, manage alerts and provide guidance when something looks suspicious.
What should businesses do now?
Businesses should focus on the basics first:
- Use multi-factor authentication
- Keep systems updated
- Train staff to recognise phishing
- Review who has access to key systems
- Back up important data
- Monitor devices and email security
- Have a clear incident response plan
Multi-factor authentication, often called MFA, means users need more than just a password to log in. This might include an app notification, a code or another form of approval.
The role of managed IT
Managed IT support can help make cyber security more consistent. A managed service can look after patching, endpoint protection, Microsoft 365 security, user access, backup checks and staff support.
This matters because cyber security is not a one-off project. It needs regular attention.
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help businesses review cyber risk, improve Microsoft 365 security, protect devices, secure email, manage backups and support staff with practical guidance.
Concerned about AI-driven cyber threats? Speak to Intuity Communications about a cyber security review for your business.
30 April 2026
Microsoft Teams Phone In 2026: More Than Just Calling From A Laptop
Microsoft Teams Phone can bring business calls into the same environment many teams already use for meetings and messaging.
Many businesses already use Microsoft Teams for meetings, messaging and file sharing. The next step is often to bring business phone calls into the same environment.
This is known as Microsoft Teams Phone. It allows users to make and receive business calls through Teams, using office numbers, call queues, auto attendants and other phone system features.
Why businesses are interested
For many organisations, Teams is already open all day. Staff use it for meetings, chats, documents and collaboration. Adding phone calls can reduce the number of separate tools users need.
This can be useful for office workers, hybrid workers, reception teams, sales teams, customer service teams, managers who travel and multi-site organisations.
It also supports the move away from older phone systems as the UK moves towards digital voice.
What businesses need to plan
Moving voice into Teams is not just a switch-on exercise. Phone systems are business-critical, so they need proper design.
Before moving, businesses should review:
- Existing phone numbers
- Call queues
- Auto attendants
- Reception requirements
- Hunt groups
- Out-of-hours routing
- Emergency calling
- Call recording needs
- Contact centre requirements
- Devices and headsets
- Connectivity
- User training
An auto attendant is a menu that answers calls and gives callers options, such as “Press 1 for sales” or “Press 2 for support.”
A call queue holds callers until someone in the right team is available.
AI and Teams Phone
Microsoft Teams is increasingly linked with AI and Copilot features. Copilot can help with summaries, notes and productivity features in supported Microsoft environments.
For a business, this can help reduce admin after calls and meetings. However, AI features should be introduced carefully, with the right security and user guidance in place.
Is Teams Phone right for every business?
Teams Phone can be a strong option, but it is not always the complete answer for every user or department.
Some organisations may need a dedicated contact centre platform. Others may need specialist call recording, advanced reporting or integration with customer systems.
The best approach is to design around the way the business actually handles calls.
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help businesses review whether Microsoft Teams Phone is the right fit, plan call routing, manage number migration and support users through the change.
Thinking about Teams Phone? Speak to Intuity Communications before you move your business calls.
22 April 2026
Contact Centres And AI: Why The Human Touch Still Matters
AI can improve contact centre performance, but customers still need human support for complex, sensitive or urgent issues.
Contact centres are changing quickly. Customers expect faster answers, more contact options and better service. At the same time, businesses need to control costs and support staff under pressure.
AI is now one of the biggest topics in the contact centre sector. It can help answer simple questions, summarise calls, support agents and analyse customer conversations.
But there is a clear message for businesses: AI should support people, not replace good service.
What AI can do well
AI is useful when it handles simple, repeatable tasks. For example:
- Answering common questions
- Summarising calls
- Suggesting next steps to agents
- Helping customers reach the right department
- Analysing call trends
- Reducing after-call notes
- Highlighting repeat issues
This can save time for customers and staff.
Where people are still essential
Customers still want human support when the issue is complex, sensitive or urgent.
For example, a billing dispute, complaint, medical issue, financial concern or service failure may need empathy and judgement. In those situations, a poor chatbot or badly designed voicebot can make the experience worse.
The strongest model is often a blend of automation and human support. AI handles the simple tasks, while skilled agents deal with the conversations that need care.
Omnichannel service is now expected
Customers no longer rely on phone calls alone. They may contact a business by phone, email, web chat, social media, messaging apps or self-service portals.
An omnichannel contact centre brings those channels together, so agents can see the customer journey instead of switching between disconnected systems.
This matters because customers do not want to repeat the same information every time they contact a business.
Reporting is one of the biggest benefits
Modern cloud contact centres give managers better visibility.
They can see call volumes, waiting times, missed calls, agent performance, repeat issues, customer sentiment, peak demand times and service levels.
This helps businesses make better decisions about staffing, training and process improvement.
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help businesses review call handling, customer journeys, reporting, AI options and cloud contact centre platforms.
The aim is to improve service without making the experience feel robotic.
Want to improve your contact centre without losing the human touch? Contact Intuity Communications to review your customer service setup.
15 April 2026
Shadow AI: The New IT Support Problem Businesses Cannot Ignore
Staff are already using AI tools at work, but businesses need clear rules to protect data and reduce risk.
Many employees are already using AI tools at work. Some use approved tools provided by their employer. Others use public tools without telling IT.
This is known as shadow AI.
Shadow AI is similar to shadow IT. Shadow IT means staff use software, apps or services that the business has not approved or managed. Shadow AI means the same thing, but with AI tools.
The risk is that sensitive company information, customer data or confidential documents may be copied into tools the business cannot monitor or control.
Why staff use shadow AI
Most people are not trying to create risk. They are usually trying to work faster.
They may use AI to:
- Write emails
- Summarise documents
- Create reports
- Draft customer replies
- Analyse data
- Create meeting notes
- Build presentations
The problem is not the desire to be productive. The problem is lack of control.
Why this matters
Businesses need to know:
- What AI tools staff are using
- What data is being entered
- Who has access
- Whether data is stored
- Whether the tool is suitable for business use
- Whether customer information is protected
- Whether the tool meets compliance requirements
Without this visibility, IT teams cannot manage the risk.
AI agents add another layer
An AI agent is a tool that can perform tasks more independently than a normal chatbot. For example, it might search files, create tasks, update systems or take actions across business applications.
This can be powerful, but it also means access control becomes very important. An AI agent should not have access to more data than it needs.
The simple principle is to give tools and users the minimum access required to do the job.
What should businesses do?
A practical AI policy should explain which AI tools are approved, what information must not be entered into AI tools, how staff should use AI-generated content, who approves new tools and what to do if someone is unsure.
This policy should be written in plain English. If staff cannot understand it, they will not follow it.
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help businesses create a practical approach to AI adoption, including managed IT support, Microsoft 365 security, user access reviews and staff guidance.
Worried about shadow AI in your business? Speak to Intuity Communications about safe AI adoption and managed IT support.
2 April 2026
Cloud Communications In 2026: Flexibility Is Now A Business Requirement
Cloud communications can help businesses support hybrid working, reduce reliance on old phone hardware and manage users more easily.
Cloud communications are no longer only for large businesses or technology-focused organisations. They are now a practical choice for businesses of many sizes.
A cloud communications platform can bring together calling, messaging, video meetings, voicemail, call routing and reporting in one service.
This gives businesses more flexibility than traditional phone systems.
Why businesses are moving to the cloud
The main reasons are simple:
- Easier support for hybrid working
- Less reliance on old phone hardware
- Faster setup for new users
- Better call routing
- Improved reporting
- Easier management across sites
- Better disaster recovery options
- Support for PSTN replacement
What flexibility means in practice
Flexibility is not just about working from home.
It might mean a receptionist can manage calls for multiple sites, a manager can take business calls on a mobile app, or a new user can be added quickly.
It might also mean calls can be routed to another office if one site is unavailable, reports can show missed calls and call volumes, seasonal staff can be added and removed more easily, or a business can open a new branch without installing a traditional phone system.
This is why cloud communications is becoming part of wider business planning.
Why connectivity still matters
Cloud communications rely on internet connectivity. If the connection is poor, call quality can suffer.
That means businesses should review broadband, fibre, leased lines, Wi-Fi and backup connectivity before moving fully to cloud voice.
A good cloud communications project should include both the phone system and the connectivity that supports it.
What about security?
Cloud does not remove the need for security. User accounts still need strong passwords, multi-factor authentication and sensible access controls.
Call recording, customer data and admin portals should all be managed properly.
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help businesses choose the right cloud communications platform, review connectivity, plan number migration, configure call routing and support users.
Need a more flexible communications setup? Contact Intuity Communications to review your cloud communications options.
25 March 2026
IT Support In 2026: Why Businesses Need More Than A Helpdesk
Modern IT support needs to cover cloud systems, cyber security, devices, backups, Microsoft 365 and business continuity.
Many businesses still think of IT support as someone to call when a laptop breaks or email stops working.
That kind of support is still important, but it is no longer enough.
Modern IT support needs to cover devices, cloud systems, cyber security, user access, backups, Microsoft 365, remote working, mobile devices, connectivity and business continuity.
Why the role of IT support has changed
Most businesses now depend on digital systems all day. Staff need access to email, files, phones, collaboration tools, customer systems and cloud applications.
If these systems fail, the business can slow down quickly.
IT support has also become closely linked with cyber security. A helpdesk ticket may not just be a technical problem. It could be a sign of a phishing attempt, compromised account or device issue.
Proactive support matters
Reactive support waits for something to go wrong. Proactive support aims to reduce problems before they affect users.
That can include:
- Installing updates
- Checking backup status
- Monitoring devices
- Reviewing Microsoft 365 security
- Managing user accounts
- Removing access when staff leave
- Checking endpoint protection
- Reviewing alerts
An endpoint is a device such as a laptop, desktop, mobile or tablet. Endpoint protection means protecting those devices from threats.
Why Microsoft 365 needs management
Many businesses use Microsoft 365 every day, but not all of them have it configured securely.
Areas to review include multi-factor authentication, conditional access, shared mailboxes, admin permissions, external sharing, email security, device access and backup requirements.
These settings can have a big impact on security and productivity.
Staff need support too
Good IT support is not only about technology. It is also about helping people.
Staff need clear guidance when something looks suspicious, when they cannot access a system or when they are unsure how to use a tool properly.
A good managed IT partner should help users feel supported, not blamed.
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can provide managed IT support covering helpdesk services, Microsoft 365, devices, security, backups, connectivity and wider technology planning.
Need IT support that does more than fix problems after they happen? Speak to Intuity Communications about managed IT services.
18 March 2026
3G Is Gone, 2G Is Next: What Mobile Network Modernisation Means For Businesses
Mobile network changes may affect older devices, payment terminals, alarms, trackers and other business systems.
Mobile networks are changing. In the UK, 3G networks have now been switched off, and attention is moving towards the future retirement of 2G.
For many businesses, this is not just a mobile phone issue. It may affect older devices and systems that still depend on 2G or 3G connectivity.
What used 2G and 3G?
Older mobile networks have supported many services, including:
- Payment terminals
- Alarm systems
- Vehicle trackers
- Remote monitoring devices
- Lift phones
- Building systems
- Legacy mobile handsets
- Some IoT devices
IoT stands for Internet of Things. It means physical devices connected to the internet, such as sensors, trackers or monitoring equipment.
Why businesses should check now
Some older systems may continue working today but could become unreliable or unsupported as networks modernise.
The safest approach is to review devices early and speak to suppliers about upgrade paths.
What comes next?
Most modern business mobile services now rely on 4G and 5G. These networks provide better performance, more capacity and improved support for modern applications.
5G can also be useful for backup connectivity, temporary sites, field teams and locations where fixed-line services are difficult or delayed.
Mobile security matters
As mobile devices become more important, security becomes more important too.
Businesses should think about device management, lost device procedures, mobile data controls, app permissions, strong authentication, business and personal data separation, remote wipe and SIM management.
A remote wipe allows a business to remove company data from a lost or stolen device.
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help businesses review mobile contracts, SIM estates, device security, 4G and 5G options and backup connectivity.
Unsure whether older mobile-connected devices could be affected by network changes? Contact Intuity Communications for a mobile estate review.
6 March 2026
Voice AI In Contact Centres: Useful Tool Or Customer Frustration Risk?
Voice AI can help contact centres reduce waiting times, but poor design can frustrate customers and damage trust.
Voice AI is becoming a major topic in contact centres. It can answer calls, understand spoken requests and help customers complete simple tasks without waiting for an agent.
Used well, it can reduce waiting times and help staff focus on more valuable conversations. Used badly, it can frustrate customers and damage trust.
Where voice AI works best
Voice AI is most useful for simple, repeatable tasks.
For example:
- Checking opening times
- Confirming appointment details
- Taking basic information
- Routing a customer to the right team
- Answering simple account questions
- Providing order status updates
- Capturing callback requests
These are the types of interactions where customers usually want speed and convenience.
Where voice AI can go wrong
Voice AI can cause frustration when it blocks customers from speaking to a person.
This is especially risky when the issue is urgent, emotional, complex, sensitive, high value or complaint related.
In these cases, customers need a clear route to a human agent.
Good design matters
A voice AI tool should be easy to understand. It should tell customers what it can help with and what to do if they need a person.
It should also transfer information to the agent, so the customer does not have to repeat everything.
What managers should measure
Businesses should not judge voice AI only by how many calls it handles.
They should also measure customer satisfaction, failed interactions, repeat calls, escalations, complaints, average wait time, agent feedback and customer drop-off.
If customers keep calling back, the automation is not working properly.
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can help businesses review contact centre call flows, AI options, reporting and customer experience.
The aim is to use automation where it helps and keep human service available where it matters.
Considering voice AI for your contact centre? Speak to Intuity Communications before adding automation to your customer journey.
28 February 2026
Insider Risk: Why Access Control Is Now A Board-Level Issue
Not every cyber risk comes from outside the business. Poor access control can create serious risk from inside.
Not every cyber risk comes from outside the business. Some risks come from inside.
This is known as insider risk. It can involve a current employee, former employee, contractor, supplier or anyone with access to business systems.
Sometimes insider risk is deliberate. Sometimes it is accidental. Either way, it can cause serious damage.
What insider risk looks like
Insider risk can include:
- Sharing passwords
- Using weak passwords
- Keeping access after leaving a company
- Downloading customer data without permission
- Sending files to personal email accounts
- Giving suppliers too much access
- Ignoring security rules
- Clicking phishing links
- Misusing admin rights
It does not always involve malicious intent. A staff member might accidentally send data to the wrong person or store files in the wrong place.
Why access control matters
Access control means making sure people can only access the systems and data they need for their role.
For example, a finance user may need access to accounting systems, but not HR records. A temporary contractor may need access to one project folder, but not the whole company file system.
This is sometimes called least privilege. It means giving the lowest level of access needed to do the job.
Why businesses should review leavers
One of the biggest risks is failing to remove access when someone leaves.
Every business should have a clear leaver process covering:
- Microsoft 365
- Shared files
- CRM systems
- Phone systems
- VPN access
- Mobile devices
- Admin accounts
- Third-party apps
A VPN is a secure connection into company systems. If a former employee still has VPN access, that creates a clear risk.
Managers need visibility
Many businesses do not know who has access to what. This makes it hard to spot risk.
A regular access review can help answer simple questions. Who has admin rights? Who can access customer data? Which accounts are unused? Which shared mailboxes exist? Do former staff still have access?
How Intuity Communications can help
Intuity Communications can support businesses with user access reviews, Microsoft 365 security, device management, cyber security checks and managed IT processes.
Want better control over who can access your systems? Speak to Intuity Communications about a user access and cyber security review.