Cisco Cisco IPCC Web Option Design Guide

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C H A P T E R
 
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Cisco Unified Contact Center Enterprise 7.0, 7.1, and 7.2 SRND
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9
Sizing Call Center Resources
Central to designing a Cisco Unified Contact Center (or any call center) is the proper sizing of its 
resources. This chapter discusses the tools and methodologies needed to determine the required number 
of call center agents (based on customer requirements such as call volume and service level desired), the 
number of Unified IP IVR ports required for various call scenarios (such as call treatment, prompt and 
collect, queuing, and self-service applications), and the number of voice gateway ports required to carry 
the traffic volume coming from the PSTN or other TDM source such as PBXs and TDM IVRs.
The methodologies and tools presented in this chapter are based on traffic engineering principles using 
the Erlang-B and Erlang-C models applied to the various resources in a Unified CCE deployment. 
Examples are provided to illustrate how resources can be impacted under various call scenarios such as 
call treatment (prompt and collect) in the Unified IP IVR and agent wrap-up time. These tools and 
methodologies are intended as building blocks for sizing call center resources and for any telephony 
applications in general.
Call Center Basic Traffic Terminology
It is important to be familiar with, and to be consistent in the use of, common call center terminology. 
Improper use of these terms in the tools used to size call center resources can lead to inaccurate sizing 
results.
The terms listed in this section are the most common terms used in the industry for sizing call center 
resources. There are also other resources available on the internet for defining call center terms.
In addition to the terms listed in this section, the section on the 
, defines the specific terms used for the input and output of the Unified CCE Resource 
Calculator, the Cisco call center sizing tool.
Also, for more details on various call center terms and concepts discussed in this document, refer to the 
Unified CCE product documentation available online at 
Busy Hour or Busy Interval
A busy interval could be one hour or less (such as 30 minutes or 15 minutes, if sizing is desired for such 
smaller intervals). The busy interval occurs when the most traffic is offered during this period of the day. 
The busy hour or interval varies over days, weeks, and months. There are weekly busy hours and 
seasonal busy hours. There is one busiest hour in the year. Common practice is to design for the average 
busy hour (the average of the 10 busiest hours in one year). This average is not always applied, however, 
when staffing is required to accommodate a marketing campaign or a seasonal busy hour such as an 
annual holiday peak. In a call center, staffing for the maximum number of agent is determined using peak