Requirements for setting up Business Advocate
Avaya Business Advocate User Guide February 2006 81
Business Advocate decisions at a glance
You need to make several decisions about how to implement Business Advocate. Some of
these decisions affect your contact center system wide, while others affect particular Vector
Directory Numbers (VDNs), skills, or agents. The following table lists the features that are
available with Business Advocate and Dynamic Advocate, the level of impact for implementing
those features, and where the features are administered on the switch.
Administer Dynamic Queue Position (Service
Objective by VDN, including Service Level Targets) X
Administer Service Level Supervisor (including
thresholds, Call Selection Override, Activate on
Oldest Call Waiting, Dynamic Threshold Adjustment,
and Service Level Targets)
X
Determine whether to use After Call Work (ACW) in
LOA calculation X
Review or change agent skills X X (existing login
IDs)
Add or delete skills per agent X X (existing login
IDs)
Assign reserve agents X X (existing login
IDs)
Task Communication
Manager CMS Supervisor
or CMS
Feature Decision
level Where administered
Least Occupied Agent:
LOA (Group Type) Skill Hunt Group form
ACW Considered Idle? System Feature-Related System
Parameters form
Percent Allocation:
Percent Allocation (call handling
preference) Agent Agent LoginID form
PAD (group type) Skill Hunt Group form
Expected Call Handling Time Skill Hunt Group form