“The world has become much more multi-vendor, especially for large organizations and their use of communications tools,” Micah Singer, CEO at Kurmi Software, explained.
These increasingly diverse technology environments have given way to multi-vendor ecosystems where organizations select best-of-breed components across their communications infrastructure.
“It used to be a lot of organizations would choose Cisco, Avaya, or Mitel for their communications needs, but now there are many more vendors, and because everyone is in the cloud, it is easier to install and connect them.”
Although it has brought increased capabilities, this proliferation of vendors creates a critical administration challenge for IT teams at large enterprises.
Managing a single system was already overly complex and time-consuming – provisioning a user often required multiple steps across several screens, and repeating data entry. Now, it has become even more challenging as administration spans multiple systems, each with its own management interface, API, authentication protocol, and configuration requirements.
The result is a fragmented workflow that demands excessive time, introduces security vulnerabilities, and drives operational costs.
According to Singer, this evolution has necessitated a more strategic approach to UC management: “As a UC service management platform, we need to identify technology vendors commonly deployed in enterprise communication ecosystems, then define the administrative use cases where our integrated solutions deliver greater value to shared clients,” he said.
“So that led us to say we need a more vibrant, true ecosystem program.”
This realization has culminated in Kurmi’s Ecosystem Partner Program, a technical integration initiative designed to address the multi-vendor management challenges pervasive in modern UC environments.
The Technology Integration Imperative
Kurmi’s Ecosystem Partner Program is a strategic initiative designed to foster deep collaboration between Kurmi and a broad range of UC technology vendors, including UC platforms, contact centers, SBC providers, compliance recording, e911 services, and other IT tools like ITSMs and HRMs.
Yet at its core, Kurmi’s partner ecosystem is fundamentally about technical integration rather than mere marketing partnerships.
“When I say ecosystem, I mean first and foremost technology ecosystem, though often this leads to marketing and sales conversations,” Singer specified.
Kurmi’s partner ecosystem focuses on expanding technical integrations so that enterprises and managed service providers can simplify administration across complex multi-system environments. After these integrations go live, there are opportunities for co-marketing to educate about the benefits to shared customers and prospects.
One common scenario where Kurmi’s Partnership Ecosystem proves practical involves managing user transitions across communication platforms that weren’t designed to work together.
“There are many organizations that were using a single on-premises solution from a single vendor and now use multiple cloud vendors,” Singer said.
Yet these hybrid environments create significant management challenges that Kurmi’s ecosystem is uniquely positioned to solve.
The program evolved naturally from Kurmi’s position as a middleware provider specializing in provisioning and management automation across UC and contact center systems.
“We are already managing provisioning across multiple components – though often on a single vendor – so we were in a really good position to start an ecosystem program using a similar model across many partners,” Singer said.
This position enables Kurmi to serve as the centralized automation layer across various communication technologies.
Creating Value Through Technical Integration
For ecosystem partners, integration with Kurmi’s platform expands their market reach by making their solutions more accessible to large enterprises.
“We have a really great list of enterprise clients, in Europe, the Middle East, and the US, so that’s an attractive proposition for vendors to engage with our ecosystem,” Singer explained.
Additionally, when enterprises consider adding new capabilities to their communications infrastructure, they often prioritize solutions that integrate with their existing management systems.
This dynamic creates a powerful incentive for technology vendors to participate in Kurmi’s ecosystem.
As Singer points out, “This establishes them to be built into more systems so they can gain customers effortlessly.”
Equally, a critical differentiator for Kurmi’s ecosystem is that it’s not a competitive ecosphere.
“One fact that has been really important as Kurmi has developed an ecosystem is that we do not compete with our partners,” Singer noted.
“We’re very focused on provisioning and management and the automation not on being an MSP, or on monitoring and analytics or trying to sell minutes or specialized application technology. In short, we complement many of our peer technology vendors creating a net positive effect for enterprise IT customers.”
This non-competitive stance creates a foundation of trust that strengthens ecosystem relationships and fosters genuine collaboration.
Future-Proofing UC Management
Looking toward the future, Kurmi sees its ecosystem playing an increasingly vital role as enterprises accelerate their automation initiatives.
“There’s a big trend towards automation and cost-cutting in IT, and not because people want to spend less on IT, there’s just no value in humans doing repetitive work, and there’s a lot of it to pull out,” Singer explained.
This automation trend is transforming how enterprises approach their communications infrastructure management.
Rather than relying on manual processes that require extensive human intervention, organizations are seeking integrated solutions that can automate repetitive tasks across multiple systems.
To enable this automation-centric future, Kurmi is investing heavily in its integration capabilities.
“One thing that we’re really focused on now is improving our tools for integration,” Singer explained.
“To integrate all these systems, you have to deal with security issues. You have to deal with data access: what data is available, what the API is on the other end, and how easy integration is. We are hard at work upgrading our SDK (software development kit) so we can expand integration capabilities to allow partners, MSP, and enterprises to use our tech to fit more snugly into their requirements.” Singer explained.
It is here, that the ease of use and ability to select a combination of best-in-breed communication solutions for your needs, that position Kurmi’s ecosystem at the heart of UC’s evolution.
By tackling complexity and instead providing increased automation capabilities, Kurmi’s Partnership Ecosystem is preparing partners and their customers to build better UC solutions for themselves and the wider industry.