Hipchat was discontinued by Atlassian. Users are being migrated to Slack.
$0
per user
Quo
Score 8.1 out of 10
N/A
Quo (formerly OpenPhone) is a business phone and VoIP solution designed to help maintain work life balance. Features include incoming call identification, set business hours, contact ownership information to associate calls to teammembers, etc., to help organize call responding.
$19
per month per user
Pricing
HipChat (discontinued)
Quo
Editions & Modules
HipChat Basic
$0
per user
HipChat Plus
$2
per user
Starter
$19
per month per user
Business
$33
per month per user
Scale
$47
per month per user
Enterprise
Custom Pricing
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
HipChat (discontinued)
Quo
Free Trial
Yes
Yes
Free/Freemium Version
Yes
No
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
Yes
No
Entry-level Setup Fee
No setup fee
No setup fee
Additional Details
For Server pricing info please visit https://www.hipchat.com/server (Only $1.20/user/month at the highest user tier!)
Discounts available for annual pricing.
More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
HipChat (discontinued)
Quo
Features
HipChat (discontinued)
Quo
Project Management
Comparison of Project Management features of Product A and Product B
HipChat (discontinued)
7.3
106 Ratings
6% below category average
Quo
-
Ratings
Mobile Access
7.397 Ratings
00 Ratings
Search
7.2103 Ratings
00 Ratings
Communication
Comparison of Communication features of Product A and Product B
HipChat (discontinued)
7.3
132 Ratings
9% below category average
Quo
-
Ratings
Chat
7.7132 Ratings
00 Ratings
Notifications
7.7130 Ratings
00 Ratings
Discussions
6.5110 Ratings
00 Ratings
Surveys
7.834 Ratings
00 Ratings
Internal knowledgebase
7.043 Ratings
00 Ratings
Integrates with GoToMeeting
7.023 Ratings
00 Ratings
File Sharing & Management
Comparison of File Sharing & Management features of Product A and Product B
HipChat (discontinued)
6.3
95 Ratings
24% below category average
Quo
-
Ratings
Video files
6.585 Ratings
00 Ratings
Audio files
6.873 Ratings
00 Ratings
Access control
6.660 Ratings
00 Ratings
Advanced security features
5.949 Ratings
00 Ratings
Integrates with Google Drive
6.027 Ratings
00 Ratings
Device sync
6.055 Ratings
00 Ratings
Cloud PBX
Comparison of Cloud PBX features of Product A and Product B
HipChat (discontinued)
-
Ratings
Quo
5.2
5 Ratings
43% below category average
Hosted PBX
00 Ratings
4.14 Ratings
Multi-level Interactive Voice Response (IVR)
00 Ratings
4.15 Ratings
User templates
00 Ratings
7.24 Ratings
Call reports
00 Ratings
4.14 Ratings
Directory of employee names
00 Ratings
6.44 Ratings
Call Management
Comparison of Call Management features of Product A and Product B
HipChat (discontinued)
-
Ratings
Quo
6.8
9 Ratings
21% below category average
Answering rules
00 Ratings
6.46 Ratings
Call recording
00 Ratings
6.58 Ratings
Call park
00 Ratings
6.45 Ratings
Call screening
00 Ratings
6.57 Ratings
Message alerts
00 Ratings
8.07 Ratings
VoIP system collaboration
Comparison of VoIP system collaboration features of Product A and Product B
HipChat (discontinued)
-
Ratings
Quo
5.3
10 Ratings
41% below category average
Video conferencing
00 Ratings
4.12 Ratings
Audio conferencing
00 Ratings
4.15 Ratings
Video screen sharing
00 Ratings
5.01 Ratings
Instant messaging
00 Ratings
8.010 Ratings
Mobile apps
Comparison of Mobile apps features of Product A and Product B
If you have more than 2 people in your organization, then this will save you so much time. Delegation is the key to starting a business. Even when you're a 1 person show, being able to present to your user base the differentiation of options for client communications is critical. As a founder, feeling compelled to be always on is something I strive not to be. OpenPhone gives you that flexibility. I have found it to be less appropriate in complex HIPPA compliant areas, but that is it. OpenPhone really does seem to suit an open array of use cases.
HipChat is very stable and reliable. I have never had issues with not being able to connect or being able to communicate with others on HipChat.
HipChat integrates quite well with other applications, such as Jira and Stash. This is a main selling point for my team. It provides a convenient feed of actions on a JIRA story or Stash pull request.
HipCat does a good job of allowing 1-1 and group chats. It is simple to start a new conversation and it is easy to hold a group conversation and keep track of who is in the room.
I like how HipChat has away/here/on mobile statuses. This makes it easy to see if a person is available to be contacted.
Mobile app is not very responsive on iOS. Sometimes connection to Hipchat servers is taking too long even on good networks.
Both mobile and desktop versions have no alphabetical or recent sorting for groups and chat rooms.
Video and audio calls are pretty useless, they're slow and not always work.
The whole user interface is simple but very outdated - apparently Atlassian didn't focus too much on Hipchat even though they tried in the last 2 years.
The app itself had a pleasant if not generic interface. As a user experience expert and engineer I can say the interface is fairly intuitive if not bland. It does what you expect it to do and it's available on iOS and Android devices. If I recall it was generally pretty light weight in terms of installation size.
In my experience, App features are buggy and confusing, and they often don't match the descriptions and screenshots in their documentation. In fact, many of their help links go to 404 "page not found" errors. In my experience, there are frequent outages and quality issues. My customers prefer to talk to me on a different line, because they find it difficult to understand me on OpenPhone.
HipChat support is good . Responds in timely manner when ever we have raised the request via email , phone and gives us continue update on the request .Though most of the questions are answered by HipChat FAQs , but they can still improve it and add more to the knowledge base .
In my experience, their support feels like the opposite of support. They send you in circles, never directly answer questions, provide vague suggestions with unwanted platitudes, and they often take days between responses to provide that. For me, it's a frustrating experience that leaves you with a net loss of time and energy versus before you reached out to them. In my opinion, you definitely don't get "support".
We tried a lot of chat clients before choosing HipChat. The Skype for Business UI on the Mac side was 5 years old and terrible. Mac users hated the app including our CTO. Cisco Jabber was expensive to license and maintain; Skype was open to the public which took time away due to users dealing with spam and could allow viruses and malware. HipChat being a closed product, centrally managed and available to try without an upfront investment was perfect for our environment. All our Agile teams have their own room, chat and can communicate with others quickly and easily.
OpenPhone has an easier user interface than Grasshopper. Years ago when I was using Grasshopper, I recall that their user interface looked antiquated and full of complications. They would also update the interface just as everyone was getting used to using it. OpenPhone has many more functions. Grasshopper's app did not offer basic functions such as in-app texting between team members, and its call transfer function was incredibly complicated to use. In my opinion, Grasshopper was an inferior service/product in almost every way.
In my experience, Billing lacks transparency, and they have made billing errors (overcharging me) since I started using them. I think the "trust registration" is an insane ripoff charging around $20 for every attempt. Crazy.
Actually I never shared of HipChat using with more than 25 persons in team simultaneously, but I believe it can be scaled for much largest collaboration teams. At least it works flawlessly for us, with transparent integration with Jira, and I am not see any reasons for some troubles for work at big scale.
HipChat has increased the effiency with which I am able to communicate with my coworkers, particularly those who work out of other offices. Having a light, portable messaging solution has been beneficial for checking in on small things without the need to send emails or schedule phone calls.