Summary:
If your business runs on Microsoft Teams, odds are Contact Center integration is on your radar. But here’s the reality: “Contact Center for Teams” isn’t a single product. In this blog, we highlight seven different paths - each with tradeoffs in cost, complexity, and capability.
Some setups work for internal help desks. Others are built for global service teams. Many businesses land somewhere in between. This guide lays out the options so you can choose with clarity not guesswork.
This is where it starts. Microsoft Teams includes auto attendants and call queues — enough to build basic routing menus and get inbound calls to the right people. No licenses. No integrations. Just Teams doing what it can.
Good for:
✅ Included with Teams
✅ Quick to set up
✅ Works with Teams presence
Cons:
❌ No supervisor tools
❌ No analytics or SLAs
❌ No support for omnichannel or escalation
This is “good enough” for some. But it’s not a true Contact Center.
Upgrade to Teams Premium ($10 per user/month), and you get access to Microsoft’s Queues App — a modest step toward Contact Center capability. It brings better routing, some basic reporting, and features like whisper and barge built-in.
Good for:
Pros:
✅ Voice routing with supervision tools
✅ Historical reporting (up to 28 days)
✅ Native to Microsoft ecosystem
Cons:
❌ Voice only — no chat, email, or SMS
❌ No skills-based routing
❌ No CRM or ticketing integrations
Better than basic. Still limited.
If you already use a platform like Genesys, NICE, or Five9, don’t panic. You can keep it. Teams lets you route calls into external contact centers while your agents stay on their existing tools.
Good for:
Pros:
✅ No rip-and-replace
✅ Scalable to thousands of agents
✅ Retains current tools and processes
Cons:
❌ Disjointed user experience
❌ Agents may never touch Teams
❌ Complex routing architecture
Some Contact Center platforms are certified under Microsoft’s Connect model — the most basic form of Teams interoperability. In this setup, calls route into the contact center first, which then pushes them into Teams. There’s little to no embedded experience for agents, and Teams is used primarily for call handling, not as the core contact center interface.
Good for:
✅ Certified by Microsoft
✅ Works with existing CCaaS platforms
✅ Doesn’t require major system changes
Cons:
❌ Disjointed agent experience
❌ Limited integration with Teams presence or UI
❌ Adds complexity without full platform alignment
Where it fits:
Connect works as a technical bridge — not a long-term strategy. If your contact center platform is already certified and deeply embedded in your workflows, this may be enough to route calls through Teams. But if you want a truly integrated experience, Extend or Unify models are far better aligned with Microsoft’s direction.
Here’s where Microsoft gets serious. “Extend” certified platforms run inside Teams, using official APIs. You get native presence sync, real-time dashboards, and all the routing control you need.
Good for:
Pros:
✅ Native Teams interface
✅ Media routes through Teams infrastructure
✅ Enterprise-grade analytics and SLAs
Cons:
❌ Requires Teams Phone license
❌ Vendor onboarding needed
Built on Microsoft’s Extend model, Solgari turns Microsoft Teams into a fully functional, omnichannel contact center without the need for third-party platforms, retraining, or complex integrations.
Your team gets one interface for everything: voice, SMS, WhatsApp, web chat, email, and social media - all inside Teams. Every interaction is recorded and logged automatically into Dynamics 365, Salesforce, or HubSpot.
Solgari also brings AI into the conversation. Real-time translation. Sentiment tracking. Conversation summaries that work with Microsoft Copilot. You don’t need to build these tools they’re already baked in.
The “Unify” model is emerging — with contact centers built on Azure Communication Services, just like Teams. These aren't fully certified yet, but they promise tighter integration, stronger AI, and long-term alignment with Microsoft’s roadmap.
Good for:
Pros:
✅ Built on same cloud infrastructure as Teams
✅ Optimized for AI, scale, and performance
✅ Promises full integration in future
Cons:
❌ Still early — not fully productized
❌ Vendor ecosystem is thin
❌ Risk of vendor lock-in if Microsoft shifts direction
If you’re thinking beyond 2025, Unify should be on your radar. But today, it’s watch-and-wait.
Dynamics 365 Contact Center brings together Teams, CRM, and AI — but it’s not for the faint-hearted. Deep capabilities come with a steep learning curve, and it lives outside the Teams interface.
Good for:
Pros:
✅ End-to-end Microsoft ecosystem
✅ AI-driven workflows and automation
✅ Deep CRM integration
Cons:
❌ Separate user experience from Teams
❌ Expensive and complex
❌ Overkill for most mid-market organizations
This is Microsoft’s heavyweight move. If you’re all-in on Dynamics, it’s worth a serious look.
Pure IP offers a pre-configured enterprise voice solution for Dynamics, read more about it here.
So … which one fits?
Start with a simple question: Who owns your contact center?
If it’s a dedicated CX or operations team with its own tech stack, stick with standalone or connect options. If IT owns the Microsoft ecosystem, Extend or Embedded models are the logical evolution. They cut down sprawl, reduce switching costs, and centralize support.
Don’t pick a platform. Pick a path.
There’s no single answer to “Contact Center for Teams.” Each option comes with tradeoffs. What matters is choosing the model that fits how your business is structured, who owns the decision, and what kind of customer experience you want to deliver.
If you're committed to Teams, you now have a full spectrum to work with. From in-the-box call queues to full-featured, embedded platforms. From transitional routing to AI-powered, CRM-connected experiences.
The right answer starts with understanding what’s available and why it matters.