TrustRadius Insights for Sococo are summaries of user sentiment data from TrustRadius reviews and, when necessary, third party data sources.
Pros
Highly effective solution for real-time communication and collaboration: Many users have found Sococo to be an extremely effective solution for real-time communication and collaboration. They appreciate the advanced features and affordable pricing, as well as the user-friendly conference calling software that allows for easy interpretation, excellent call quality, and real-time chat in virtual rooms.
Easy-to-use platform with quick face-to-face web calls: Users love how easy it is to use Sococo and the ability to quickly conduct face-to-face web calls. The platform enables seamless communication, making it effortless to connect with team members and efficiently conduct meetings.
Customizable virtual office layout: Users highly appreciate the customizable virtual office layout feature of Sococo. It creates a realistic office environment where they can visually see who is attending meetings. This not only simplifies company-wide gatherings but also helps teams stay connected effectively.
We used Sococo to facilitate a large software development project with teams spread across four countries. Using the virtual rooms that Sococo provides we found that we were able to collaborate with other engineers hundres of miles away as if we were in the same building.
Throughout the day we used the text chat facility. If we wanted to exchange more than a few words the we could immediately switch to a voice conversation. We had daily scrum meetings with each team every morning and these worked better than physical meetings because we didn't have to wait for people to file into a physical room. The order for speaking was easy as Sococo shows participants clockwise in the order they join. Simply make the last one in start then go anticlockwise.
As conference call software Sococo is much better than Skype for business. You don't need to search for a special client as it sorks on the Chrome browser, it works on Linux and, most importantly, you don't need to mess arywith pre-arranged meeting invites. Just invite people to a room and have an ad-hoc discussion whenever you want.
Pros
Conference calls. No need for formal invites, excellent call quality and reliability.
Virtual rooms - see who's talking with who.
Instant chat - can also use Slack as a backend.
Cons
It would be great if it supported other major browsers. Not everyone has Chrome installed.
The ongoing subscription cost is difficult to justify. This is the only reason we stopped using it.
Likelihood to Recommend
Well suited for large distributed teams. Hard to introduce where someone who should know better has mandated an inferior Microsoft product.
My team at work uses Sococo. We use as our 'virtual office space' when we're not all physically present in the building. The ability to have one own's virtual office allows us to easily hop into a 'call' with one another to discuss various projects. In addition, the presence of meeting rooms makes it easy to have larger team meetings. The screen sharing utility makes it easy to work through various bugs etc. that require some group effort to solve. My favorite part about Sococo is that it's easy to quickly hop between different calls within the virtual office.
Pros
Good voice codex. Voices come across clearly and I've never had problems struggling to understand another person due to static.
Easy screen sharing. The screen sharing is intuitive and easy to use. In addition, it's easy for multiple people to be sharing a screen at the same time, and viewers can easily hop between the different shared screens.
Has a mobile phone application version, web browser version , and stand alone client.
Cons
On rare occasions my co-workers have had problems where they open Sococo and it doesn't recognize when they're speaking. However, restarting the program usually fixes it.
Users can 'knock' on another's 'virtual' office to come in to talk. Essentially, the same as waiting for a person to pick up when calling on a landline. An option to auto-let anyone in who knocks would be useful.
Likelihood to Recommend
I think it's great for a team that does a lot of remote work that has to communicate a lot. It's easy to hop between calls/share screens, in a more smoother fashion than a traditional 'Skype' style of voice chat program. I've also found it to be smoother for hopping between shared screens than other options.
VU
Verified User
Engineer in Engineering (Computer Software company, 10,001+ employees)
Sococo is used heavily in the development department. The ops and general company departments tend to use Lync, but some of the more tech savvy people in the company use Sococo to keep team interactions simpler. My department uses it to perform standups and meetings with people when they are working remotely. Some teams are almost entirely remote or predominantly remote. It's primarily used for meetings.
Pros
The UI is more useful than you would expect floating heads in little rooms to be. Being able to get a visual of what's going on is very insightful.
Being able to move around between rooms is a breeze.
Screen sharing is very simple and an important activity to have streamlined.
Cons
Audio quality is often a challenge. People will cut in and out.
Video quality can be a challenge sometimes when someone is sharing their screen or camera.
Moving between Sococo "Areas" can be a little bit challenging for new users not used to Sococo.
Likelihood to Recommend
Sococo is great for small to medium heavily remote teams that want to perform meetings or just be in a situation where meeting is just a few clicks away instead of some sort of complex call system. It's also great if you want people to just drop in and out as you can perform a 30-second call without all the awkward setup you might have with Lync or WebEx.
VU
Verified User
Engineer in Engineering (Computer Software company, 10,001+ employees)