CCaaS, or contact center as a service, is cloud software that runs a company's contact center operations, historically centered on voice and telephony with digital channels layered on. Rather than running on-premise phone infrastructure, a company subscribes to a cloud platform that handles call routing, queuing, agent workspaces, and reporting.
CCaaS grew out of the call center, so its center of gravity is the phone: inbound and outbound voice, interactive voice response, and call distribution. Over time, vendors added email, chat, and messaging to become omnichannel, but the telephony layer remains the defining feature of the category. CCaaS is the operational backbone, the system that connects a customer to an agent and tracks what happens on the line.
Aide, the agentic AI platform for customer experience, is not a CCaaS and does not operate the phone layer. Aide works on the digital channels: chat, email, and messaging inside helpdesks like Front, Zendesk, and Gorgias. The two are complementary, not the same category. Where the contact center connects the call, Aide resolves the text: repetitive intents handled end to end, judgment cases routed to people with full context.
Frequently asked questions
- What does CCaaS stand for?
- CCaaS stands for contact center as a service. It is cloud software that runs contact center operations, historically built around voice and telephony, with digital channels added over time.
- Is Aide a CCaaS platform?
- No. Aide does not operate voice or telephony. Aide is an agentic AI platform that resolves customer requests on digital channels like chat, email, and messaging inside the helpdesk. It complements a contact center rather than replacing the phone layer.