Dixa is customer service software that empowers brands to create great experiences for customers and support teams alike in a conversational, friendly, and engaging way. Dixa unifies voice, email, chat, and messaging apps in one single platform, enabling brands to have more meaningful conversations with their customers, driving customer loyalty, and ultimately “customer friendships.” With Dixa, agents have all the context they need to provide fast, efficient, and effective customer service every time.
With customer recognition features, Dixa makes it possible to know your customers the second they reach out. We do this by displaying each customer's conversation history with your business in a timeline as well as their order history instantly. This ensures teams have the information they need to solve customer inquiries faster while delivering more personalized support.
All conversation types (phone, email, chat, etc.) are placed into queues and automatically routed to the appropriate agents while conversation data is translated into real-time analytics. Dixa features include VoIP, IVR, callback, click-to-call, call recording, automations, quick responses, customizable chat widgets, real-time and historical reporting, and advanced routing.
Dixa’s user-friendly interface and easy setup was made to enhance the agent experience and allow teams to focus on the customer and not the software.
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Based on our record, Bandwidth seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 73 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I know this was a scam, but I spooked them (or broke the bot?) before I heard their plan. I did a reverse image search, and I found nothing. I looked at the metadata on the image, but I saw nothing useful. I looked up the number and found out it was a virtual number from bandwidth.com. I didn't know what to do after that, so I just reported the number to bandwidth. Source: 5 months ago
I wanted to add a secondary provider though with Direct Routing for fail over but was looking for recommendations. I'm in Canada so prefer someone with a Canadian POP but not mandatory. I also prefer self-signup when possible, similar to Telnyx, Flowroute etc. I was checking bandwidth.com as I see they do this but it doesn't let you sign up and wants you to contact sales. That's fine and I was planning on... Source: about 1 year ago
You can pop your area code and prefix in the link below and see what providers do have a presence. Obviously, Sprint/T-Mobile will be one of them but if you don't see bandwidth.com then you're out of luck and there are no workarounds. Source: over 1 year ago
Your provider should be able to provide a short code (e.g. '933' if using bandwidth.com) that will read out the e911 information for the number calling. Source: over 1 year ago
While I think you have your answer, another way to validate a number is to use https://freecarrierlookup.com/ and check the phone number. From that you can often tell if it is a "web only" number that a scammer outside the US would use. For example, it might belong to bandwidth.com or google voice. If it does belong to Bandwidth.com you can report it to them, and they are really fast at cancelling scammers. Source: over 1 year ago
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