One directory, every phone, always current — managed contact lists for the field forces and shared devices the mailbox world forgot.
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AstroContacts is 42Gears' enterprise contact management tool: a centrally-administered company directory pushed to every mobile team member's phone — shared contact lists by team or role, updated once and synced everywhere, so the field workforce always dials the current number. It solves the problem GAL and Google Contacts leave on the table: frontline and field workers on shared or corporate devices who need the right 200 numbers without personal-account sync, spreadsheet exports or WhatsApp-forwarded vCards.
This page covers AstroContacts — the directory tool. The rest of the 42Gears lineup:
Most product pages skip this. We start here — so you buy a capability, not a buzzword.
Enterprise contact management treats the company phonebook as managed infrastructure: one central directory, scoped lists per team, automatic sync to every phone, and clean joiner/leaver hygiene.
AstroContacts is the frontline-shaped version: built for field forces and shared devices without personal accounts — the workers the mailbox-tied directories never reach.
What consolidation actually replaces, dimension by dimension.
| Dimension | Personal phones + forwarded vCards | Managed directory (AstroContacts) |
|---|---|---|
| Source of truth | Everyone's personal phone, differently wrong | One central directory, admin-owned |
| Number changes | WhatsApp-forwarded vCards for a week | Update once, synced everywhere in minutes |
| Shared devices | No account, no contacts — a blank phonebook | The right directory, no personal account needed |
| New joiner | 'Ask around for numbers' as onboarding | The right lists on the phone, day one |
| Leaver | Customer list departs in their Gmail | Removed from every phone the same hour |
| Finding people | Call two people to reach a third | Search by role/site, dial in two taps |
| Scoping | A 5,000-row export or nothing | Role-based lists — the relevant 200 |
| Cost shape | Invisible: missed handoffs and leaked lists | A light per-user subscription |
Adoption is incremental — one team pilots, the import file grows, and the vCard floods end team by team.
Vendors love diagrams; buyers need to know what they’re actually operating. Here’s the whole platform, demystified.
Company contacts administered once in a web console — bulk-imported, deduplicated and owned by the org instead of scattered across personal phones.
Lists by team, role or site — the driver pool gets dispatch and depots; the sales team gets accounts and support. Nobody carries the whole company.
Changes propagate to every assigned phone automatically — the new depot number is everywhere before the old one causes a missed delivery.
A clean contacts app on each device — searchable, call/message-ready, and separate from personal contacts.
Joiners, leavers, number changes and list membership handled centrally — contact chaos becomes a two-minute admin task.
One agent on every machine, one console over all of them — modules attach without a second operational world.
AstroContacts replaces the forwarded-vCard economy — and the leaked-list risk — with a pushed, scoped, managed phonebook.
One master company phonebook, administered in a web console — the single source of truth personal phones never were.
The existing spreadsheet-and-vCard chaos imports in one pass — cleaned, deduplicated and structured on the way in.
Drivers get dispatch, engineers get escalation, sales gets accounts — scoped lists mean the right 200 numbers, not a 5,000-row dump.
Update the depot number once; every assigned phone has it within minutes — no re-shares, no stale vCards, no missed handoffs.
Field workers search by name, role or site and dial in two taps — the app is a phonebook first, not a CRM cosplay.
Company contacts live in the app, not merged into personal accounts — offboarding doesn't mean your customer list left in someone's Gmail.
The depot tablet and the shift phone carry the right directory without any personal account signed in — the use case GAL structurally can't serve.
New hire appears in the right lists on day one; a leaver vanishes from every phone the same hour — directory hygiene as an admin action.
Roles, sites, departments and custom fields — enough structure to find 'the electrician at Depot 4' without a phone tree.
Who can edit which lists — HR owns people, dispatch owns depots — with changes audited.
On managed fleets, the app deploys and updates silently via SureMDM — the directory arrives with the device, zero user setup.
The synced directory works without signal — the field engineer in the basement still finds the escalation number.
Official 42Gears videos — the managed-fleet world AstroContacts deploys into.
The managed-fleet world AstroContacts deploys into.
The frontline-device philosophy behind the whole 42Gears family.
The console that silently deploys AstroContacts across managed fleets.
Want a live, India-context walkthrough on your own fleet?
Book a guided demo →Here’s what genuinely sets AstroContacts apart from the alternatives.
Exchange GAL and Google Contacts assume a mailbox per person on a personal-ish device. Field forces on shared and corporate hardware have neither — AstroContacts is directory infrastructure for exactly them.
The depot number changes once, centrally — and the missed-delivery class of error caused by stale numbers on 400 phones simply ends.
Role-based lists mean each worker carries their relevant 200 numbers, searchable in two taps — not a 5,000-row export nobody scrolls.
Company contacts live in the managed app, not merged into personal Gmail — when someone leaves, the customer list leaves their phone, not your control.
Via SureMDM the app installs and configures silently — a new driver's phone has the right directory before their first shift, with no account creation ritual.
It's a directory tool, not a CRM with onboarding consultants — bulk import to first synced phone is an afternoon, and the subscription is priced like the utility it is.
TechBag advisors gather the spreadsheets, vCards and tribal knowledge into one import file — usually the hardest step, done once.
Bulk import, role-scoped lists, the app on one team's phones — via SureMDM if the fleet is managed.
Remaining teams onboarded, admin roles assigned (HR owns people, dispatch owns depots), lifecycle process wired.
Changes are two-minute admin tasks that reach every phone; joiners and leavers are clean. TechBag handles renewals.
Trusted across frontline industries in 170+ countries
Modelled on Gartner Peer Insights structure. *Counts and breakdowns are illustrative pending verified review collection.
“Four hundred drivers, one dispatch number change, zero missed handoffs. Before AstroContacts that change was a week of WhatsApp forwards.”
“Shift phones at every depot carry the full escalation tree with no Google account signed in. This use case simply had no tool before.”
“A departing sales rep no longer walks out with the customer phonebook merged into his personal contacts. Compliance noticed immediately.”
“Site engineers search 'electrician depot 4' and dial. The old method was calling two people to get the number of a third.”
“Deployed silently through SureMDM to the whole fleet overnight. Users woke up with a phonebook; nobody filed a ticket.”
“It's a focused tool — don't expect CRM features, pipelines or e-mail sync. As a managed phonebook it does exactly its one job.”
“Joiners appear in the right lists on day one via bulk sync from HR's sheet. Leavers vanish the same day. Directory hygiene became real.”
“Offline access saved us — basements and remote sites have no signal, but the synced directory is just there.”
Analyst firms bury this view behind paywalls, and G2 retired its Grid. So here’s TechBag’s synthesis of the contact management market — tap any vendor to see why it sits where it does.
Execution strength vs product vision — the classic market map, minus the paywall.
The only purpose-built player for frontline/shared-device directories — a quiet niche with no famous rival. This page's subject.
The grid nobody publishes — how well each approach reaches field workers vs what it takes to run.
Focused capability at near-zero lift — the utility-tool corner.
Positions are TechBag’s illustrative synthesis of public review-platform data and vendor documentation — not a reproduction of any analyst graphic. Verify before relying on it.
Honest column selection: the incumbents are free and bundled — the comparison shows exactly where they stop.
| Dimension | AstroContacts | Exchange GAL | Google Contacts (Workspace) | Shared-contacts add-ons | Spreadsheets & vCards |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Model | Managed push directory | Mailbox-tied directory | Account-tied contacts | Gmail/Outlook plugins | Chaos with columns |
| Shared / frontline devices | The design centre | Structurally can't | Structurally can't | Same limitation | Printouts work anywhere |
| Role/site-scoped lists | Native | Address-list segmentation | Label gymnastics | Group shares | One tab per team |
| Update propagation | Push, minutes | Sync-dependent | Sync-dependent | Plugin-dependent | Re-forward everything |
| Offboarding hygiene | Removed from every phone | Mailbox-scoped | Account-scoped | Leaks | Already leaked |
| MDM deployment | Silent via SureMDM | Via email profiles | Via account setup | Manual-ish | N/A |
| Cost & lift | Light subscription | Bundled | Bundled | Cheap | Free |
| Best fit | Field & frontline fleets | Desk workers in Outlook | Workspace desk teams | Small office teams | Nobody, honestly |
Honest fit signals — because the fastest way to lose your trust is to pretend one product wins every scenario.
Drag the sliders (count mobile workers). Estimates assume ~1 hour per field worker per year lost to number-hunting, stale contacts and missed handoffs, with ~60% removed by a scoped, synced directory — the leaked-list risk isn't priced in. Illustrative and conservative.
Loaded cost = salary + overheads per productive hour. Illustrative only — your TechBag quote models actual device counts and modules.
AstroContacts prices as a light per-user subscription. TechBag folds it into your 42Gears quote with GST invoicing.
Best for unmanaged fleets
Best for managed fleets
Best for frontline consolidators
Whatever the list prices above, TechBag negotiates a significantly better deal — with GST-compliant INR invoicing and local support. Ask us for your discounted quote.
Tell us your device counts and current tools — we’ll model it against what you spend today.
Take this into your next vendor call — including ours.
Demo on an actual shared device with no personal account — the use case that decides this category.
Change a number centrally and time its arrival on a field phone. Minutes, not sync-cycles.
Map your real teams to lists — who needs whom? The 200-number scoped view is the value.
Bring your ugliest spreadsheet to the trial and watch the import/dedupe handle it.
Remove a test user and verify they vanish from every phone — then check what happens to contacts they'd exported.
Airplane-mode a device and search the directory. Field reality is offline reality.
On SureMDM? Push the app silently to a pilot group and confirm zero-touch arrival.
It's a managed phonebook, not a CRM — confirm nobody upstream expects pipelines and email sync.
Get a quote, scope a one-team pilot with your real import file, or bring your fleet size and let a TechBag advisor price the utility.
Stats, ratings, review counts and pricing are illustrative and sourced from public materials; verify before purchase.