Summary:
Microsoft Teams Phone and Cisco Webex Calling dominate enterprise voice, but in many cases, neither replaces the other. Teams works best for knowledge workers, while Webex serves industries where telephony is critical. Adoption numbers are close, with Teams at 20M seats and Webex at 16M. Enterprises gain flexibility by running both.
For years, the promise was consolidation. One collaboration suite. One calling plan. One place to manage everything. But that vision has never matched reality.
Global enterprises rarely run on a single stack. Teams Phone and Webex Calling dominate the market, yet neither displaces the other outright. Instead, most organizations end up with both. Not by choice, but because business needs force it — acquisitions bring new platforms, regional preferences dictate different providers, compliance blocks single-vendor rollouts.
The pattern is clear: multi-vendor voice isn’t failure. It’s strategy.
On paper, standardizing on one platform looks efficient. In practice, enterprises hit barriers quickly:
Consolidation creates as many problems as it solves. Enterprises that push too hard for “one platform to rule them all” usually end up with shadow IT, duplicated systems, and frustrated users.
Treating Teams and Webex as competitors misses the bigger picture. They solve different problems:
Most enterprises discover they don’t need to choose. They need to align each platform to the part of the business it serves best.
Watch now to see Patrick Watson and Tom Arbuthnot how Teams and Webex stack up for enterprise voice.
Research shows how close the competition really is. Microsoft Teams Phone has just over 20 million activated seats. Cisco Webex Calling is around 16 million. Zoom Phone trails at roughly 8 million.
The trend matters more than the totals. Teams Phone growth has slowed after its early surge among knowledge workers. Webex Calling is accelerating, driven by Cisco migrating its massive telephony base into the cloud. Both have staying power.
The message for IT leaders: don’t wait for one to “win.” Build for coexistence.
Licensing is one of the starkest differences between the two.
One isn’t inherently cheaper than the other. The real difference is predictability. Microsoft ties cost to broad productivity value. Cisco ties it directly to voice.
Related content: The real difference between Webex Calling and Microsoft Teams Phone >>
The platforms also diverge sharply in adjacent services.
The decision comes down to scope. If AI is a company-wide initiative, Microsoft’s model fits. If voice and customer interaction are the priority, Cisco’s is a cleaner option.
Running two platforms adds overhead, but the right strategy turns it into an advantage.
Handled well, multi-vendor estates provide resilience, flexibility, and leverage. They give enterprises choice instead of lock-in, and negotiating power instead of dependency.
The question isn’t whether Teams or Webex “wins.” It’s how IT leaders design coexistence as part of their strategy.
Enterprises that keep fighting for consolidation end up reacting. Enterprises that embrace multi-vendor as strategy stay in control.
The future of enterprise voice isn’t Teams or Webex. It’s Teams and Webex — and the IT leaders who design around that reality will come out ahead.
Master Teams and Webex with one provider. Pure IP brings proven expertise in complex, multi-platform deployments. Get in touch to discuss your requirements.