About Sites, Teams, Entry Points, and Queues
A Webex Contact Center tenant is an enterprise that has contact centers at one or more sites. The enterprise also has entry points for incoming contacts that are associated with queues. Incoming contacts can be toll-free numbers for voice calls, designated email addresses for emails, or chats with agents. For example, an enterprise that is named Acme might have an entry point that is named Welcome. Welcome classifies contacts into AcmeBilling and distributes to teams of agents in Chicago, Manila, and Bangalore.
Each Webex Contact Center tenant profile consists of sites, teams, entry points, and queues.
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A site is a physical contact center location under the control of the enterprise or an outsourcer. For example, Acme might have sites in Chicago, Manila, and Bangalore.
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A team is a group of agents at a specific site who handle a particular type of contact. For example, Acme might have teams at their Chicago site that are named Chi_Billing, Chi_Sales, and Chi_GoldCustomerService, and teams at their Bangalore site named Bgl_Billing, Bgl_GoldCustomerService, and Bgl_Experts. Agents can be assigned to more than one team, but an agent can service only one team at a time.
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An entry point is the initial landing place for the customer contacts on the Webex Contact Center system. For the voice contacts, typically one or more toll-free or dial numbers are associated with an entry point. IVR call treatment is performed while a call is in the entry point.
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A queue is where active contacts are kept while they await handling by an agent. Contacts are moved from the entry point into a queue and are distributed to agents.
Tenants that use the outdial feature are also configured with at least one outdial entry point and one outdial queue.
Telecom managers, contact center managers, and other representatives of the enterprise who are authorized to access the Webex Contact Center service have a view of contact center activity at their enterprise through the Webex Contact Center Management Portal.
In addition to sites, teams, entry points, and queues, the Provisioning module of the Webex Contact Center Management Portal provides an interface to add agents and assign them to teams. Each agent is configured with an agent profile, a value that determines the agent’s permission levels and Agent Desktop behaviors, including which wrap-up and idle codes are available to the agent. Thus, you should add wrap-up and idle codes before you define agent profiles, and define agent profiles before you define agents. If your enterprise is provisioned with the optional skills-based routing feature, you should also add skills and skill profiles before you define teams and agents.