Cisco Cisco Agent Desktop 8.5 Guia Do Utilizador

Página de 210
Voice Contact Work Flows
November 2006
95
3. Work Flow 1 says that any ringing event on the Product A support line 
triggers an HTTP action. This action takes the customer-entered account 
information from the IVR (part of the call’s enterprise data) and pops a web 
page in Agent Desktop’s or CAD-BE’s integrated browser that displays the 
customer’s account information to the agent. 
4. The agent answers the phone call and is ready to assist the customer.
Creating a Voice Contact Work Flow
The general procedure for creating a voice contact work flow is as follows:
1. Set up a new voice contact classification filter:
a. Select the type of call the work flow applies to—inbound, outbound, or all 
calls.
NOTE:  Depending on which Outbound Dialer dialing mode you are 
using, a customer call can appear as inbound or outbound. 
Therefore, when creating an Outbound Dialer work flow, select all 
calls
 as your voice classification filter.
b. If required, further classify the call by specifying it must meet various data 
field conditions.
2. Set up the second level of filtering: 
a. Select the call or agent state event—Ringing, Answered, Dropped, Work 
Ready, or Work Not Ready.
b. If required, set up one or more rules with data field conditions the call 
must meet.
c. Set up one or more action that will take place if the call or agent event 
meets the rules’ data field conditions.
3. Set up as many second level filters as needed for calls selected by the first 
level filter. You can set up rules and actions for each of the filtered call’s call 
or agent events.
NOTE:  It is possible to set rules and conditions that are 
contradictory so that a work flow cannot function. Desktop 
Administrator does not check a work flow’s logic and validity. If a 
work flow fails to operate as expected, make sure that the rules and 
conditions you set up are logically valid.