Feature Highlight: Conference Rooms

The common conference room, a necessity in today’s world with employees working from home, travelling, and distant customers. No product with PBX functionalities should be without one.

Lets take a look at the options for the conference rooms provided by the Q-Suite.
Q-Suite-Conference-Room-Admin-Page

The options seen are:

  • Name – a Friendly name. If the room is used for a purpose, as our example is, then it’s best to name it after that. This will be the name seen elsewhere within the system.
  • Extension – the extension used for directly dialing it from an extension.
  • PBX Server – This is hidden if your system has a single PBX server. In the case where there is multiple this can be used to distribute load or in the case of a geo-diverse system ensure the conference is on the server closest to the majority of participants to ensure quality and limit bandwidth usage.
  • PIN – a numeric pin to secure the conference with.
  • Disable first member message – If checked this will not playback a message stating the first member is the only one in the conference.
  • Announce user count on join – If checked this will announce to the user how many users are already in the conference they are joining.
  • Play music on hold for single member – If checked this will play music on hold when the conference has a single user. Otherwise the user will only hear silence.
  • Music On Hold Class – what music on hold to play when it’s a single user conference and the above is checked.
  • Suppress enter/leave sound – If checked a user joining or leaving the conference will not trigger the tones to be played to all conference members.
  • Announce names on enter/leave – If checked each user joining will be prompted to record their name before they join. This recording will be used as the join or leave

With all of these options you can configure the conference rooms you needed. However to fully leverage conference rooms, or any single feature, the ability to combine and interlink them to suit your needs is required. Let’s take the example of a daily standup which needs a conference room for a few remote employees. It’s always starts at 8am and lasts about 30 minutes. One way to ensure outside callers do not use it outside of this hours is a pin but you can also mix it with the Routing Rules so the DID or IVR/Auto Attendant option is not configured to point directly to the conference room but to a routing rule first. This routing rule will only route callers there at 8am until 8:30, although I’d recommend 15 mins earlier at least to allow early callers in and maybe a bit longer depending if the meeting has a strict end time or not.  The routing rule can then send them to an auto attendant or elsewhere in the system if it’s outside of the hours — add multiple rules to allow different routing if it’s before to note they are to early, or if they are late to send them to a recording of the conference to hear what they missed.

Timeout! Sports, Kids, and Contact Centers

Timeouts in the sporting world are almost always used in an effective manner. Sure there’s the odd time where it turns into an amazing disaster (Chris Webber in the 1993 NCAA Finals comes to mind), but for the most part, they are used as methods to take a breather, either to get your players rested for a final push down the stretch or to get a break from getting overwhelmed by the opposing team. In terms of kids, timeouts are administered when a child needs a break, either from misbehaving or being overstimulated. How can we apply timeouts in our contact center? Let’s have a look at a few of the ways the Q-Suite can use these. Continue reading “Timeout! Sports, Kids, and Contact Centers”

What To Do Before Someone Lets The Smoke Out of Your Server

Who let the smoke out?

The client was worried because one of the Asterisk servers had gone down without any notice at all. The overseer process on the other Asterisk server had noticed, and had taken over as the active server. The disruption was minimal. Agents were at work. But the client wanted to know what had happened, and what we could do to prevent the issue in the first place. After 30 minutes of poring over logs, digging around, and contacting the colo, we discovered that a tech had decided to swap out the power bar connected to that server. There was no notice, and not even a courtesy three-finger salute. Continue reading “What To Do Before Someone Lets The Smoke Out of Your Server”

Four Keys To Soft Phone Delight

She is pretty happy
A colleague once visited a client site, and found their server room to be a nightmare. Among other things, they had insisted their telco give them a PRI connection due to the improved reliability they thought they’d get. They had also decided to use a PRI to SIP connection in the server room to allow the flexibility of moving the telphony connection from one server to another if needed. When Justin got there, he found a SIP to PRI device on the telco side, and a PRI to SIP device connecting in to Asterisk. Continue reading “Four Keys To Soft Phone Delight”

Open or Closed Relationship: Which One is Right for You?

Open source software has come a long way in the last few decades. What was once just a mash of code lying around that lacked features and actual usefulness and usability, can now be full-fledged solutions for individuals and companies alike. Is an open source based software solution right for you or your contact center though? Let’s compare a few points of interest. Continue reading “Open or Closed Relationship: Which One is Right for You?”

Vendor lock-in can happen to anyone, even with paper towels

Our landlords have fallen to the vendor lock-in trap with the paper towel dispensers in the washrooms. The paper towel dispensers don’t use normal rolls of paper, they require a proprietary roll that has a plastic peg in the middle of the roll.

For some reason, they are unable to get that specific brand of paper towel and are now having to use an open solution: Continue reading “Vendor lock-in can happen to anyone, even with paper towels”

Avengers Assemble! Gathering the Pieces You Need for Your Contact Center ACD

It’s a big weekend for movie fans. The first weekend in May unofficially begins the summer season for Hollywood blockbusters, and there’s never been an absolute lock for a tentpole like Avengers: Age of Ultron. After the first Avengers film completely shattered the record for the opening weekend take with a lofty $207M, the sequel is expected to surpass that. Quite incredible. Just as the Marvel universe needed to gather Earth’s mightiest heroes, you too will need to wrangle up the proper components for your contact center ACD. Let’s have a look. Continue reading “Avengers Assemble! Gathering the Pieces You Need for Your Contact Center ACD”