4. Definitions and concepts

Definitions and concepts

In this section, you will find an overview of the various terms and components that will be referenced throughout this documentation.

System users and user classes

In the Nmonitoring Queues (NMQ) system, a system user is a set of access credentials that provides different levels of privilege for viewing and/or editing various parts of the NMQ system. These access credentials are defined by user keys in NMQ.

Each system user has a user class, which is usually referred to as such. For instance, a system user with the user class Supervisor is referred to as a supervisor in NMQ.

Most of the access credentials (user keys) are defined by the user's user class. However, an administrator can also add user keys to an individual system user.

User classes

When NMQ is delivered, there are standard user classes Administrator, Supervisor and Agent (including Agent RR and Agent SSR) available. However, as an administrator, you can add or remove user keys to those classes. This makes all user classes highly customisable. For example, you can grant supervisors almost all access an administrator has or, on the contrary, reduce the supervisor to having merely more options than an agent. In addition, an administrator can create new user classes or add user keys to individual users.

This manual is based on the standard user classes as they are initially set up for your NMQ system. Thus, the user classes you experience in your NMQ system might differ from the description in this manual (depending on your administrator having customised the user classes).

Queue

A queue is a collection of phone calls, inbound or outbound, associated with an ACD Service (Queue or Skill) within your telephone system (PBX).

Usually, queues are configured to consolidate all related calls.

Agents can log in or out of different queues to manage incoming calls directed to these services.

Automatic Call Distributor (ACD)

An ACD is a telephony software system that answers incoming calls and routes them to a specific agent or department within a company.

Agent

An agent is one class of system users. Other classes are, for example, supervisors and administrators. Therefore, an agent is always a system user, but a system user is an access credential to Nmonitoring Queues and doesn't have to be an agent – it could as well be an admin user or a supervisor.
Keep in mind that not all agents have the same rights and permissions. The agent's focus lies on managing their queues and skills, with the specific options available by the administrator.

TIP

In the Administration Portal, agents are referred to as ACD Queue or Skill Services’ Members.

Agent group

An agent group is an attribute that is applied to an agent, which allows to logically divide agents in an efficient fashion.

This is used as a filtering criterion (e.g. "New hires", "Regular agents", "Expert agents“) for reporting and real-time monitoring.

Each agent group can have a different icon that is displayed throughout Nmonitoring Queues whenever the agent name is displayed.

Location

Nmonitoring Queues also allows you to define locations, i.e to divide your agents based on their geographical position.

One of the significant advantages of assigning locations to agents is the ability to use them as filtering criteria in reports and real-time monitoring.

DID/NIS line

This allows you to label the DIDs associated with a queue.

It allows to provide some more context in the answered/unanswered calls section of certain reports when queues have multiple DIDs attached to them.

Reports & job settings

Probably one of the most crucial features in Nmonitoring Queues is the ability to generate historical reports on the activities of your PBX. Keep in mind that reports are only accessible from the time of the initial synchronisation of the respective queue/skill.

The solution provides a default report which contains most of the existing data blocks.

Report templates can be edited or new ones can be created, containing only the relevant information (data blocks) the manager or supervisor wants to see.

Reports can also be scheduled to run automatically and attached in an email in CSV, Excel, or PDF format.

There are multiple types of reports:

  • Quick activity reports: The quickest way to obtain an analysis is by selecting a queue and the report you want to analyse and then clicking on the appropriate time frame below Quick activity reports on the home page.
  • Agent reports: You can run all or a particular report criteria on a single agent to see their performance.
  • Custom reports: These allow for more granular reports to be run which contain specified criteria for queues, agents, groups, locations and report data.

Real-time monitoring

One of Nmonitoring Queues main features is its real-time monitoring system which allows call managers and supervisors to keep track of the activities and performance of your telephone system's queues and skills.

The data is constantly updated to give them a real-time view of the general state of their call activities.

The real-time monitoring screen can be filtered by queue, location or agent group to only present the relevant information to the user.

Wallboards

The wallboard feature available in Nmonitoring Queues allows users to create, save and edit multiple wallboards in order to customise monitoring of call activities.

The Wallboard editor is designed to let them create powerful personalised wallboards or dashboards from which they can get a real-time overview of the status of their PBX.

You can add widgets into the panel per drag&drop and create multiple pages with autorotation timers, which makes this feature ideal for showing live-call statistics on a separate monitor.