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Administering Cisco Unified Intelligence Center (ACUIC) is a 3-day administration course focusing on the CUIC reporting solution for Unified Contact Center Enterprise (UCCE), Packaged Contact Center Enterprise (PCCE) and Customer Voice Portal (CVP) environments.
CUIC is a comprehensive, end-to-end UCCE/PCCE reporting solution, designed to make the task of creating reports and managing disparate data sources, easier on the customer. Although CUIC is also used in the UCCX environment, this course focuses on UCCE and PCCE environments only. As a Contact Center Express customer, you could still benefit from attending this course, provided you are aware that the course is built on an Enterprise environment.
The first 2-days of the course focuses on the daily administrative functions of a CUIC user/administrator, running and customizing reports as needed, and ensuring security and organization of the reporting environment is functional and organized. The last day of the class will cover further maintenance/support of the CUIC environment such as A/D integration, Data Source definitions, GW/CVP/ICM configuration requirements.
Most of your time in ACUIC will be spent working in the lab environment which includes a live functional UCCE/CVP environment deployed with CUIC as the reporting solution. During this class, you will wear multiple hats including: CUIC user, administrator, supervisor, agent and report customization specialist. The third day of class explores skills needed for architects and engineers.
ACUIC is intended to be a 3-day class. If your role is a reporting user and/or basic CUIC administrator you have the option to attend the first two days of class only. If you are responsible for advanced maintenance and management of the CUIC architecture, you’ll want to stick around for all three days.
This course is intended for anyone who desires an understanding of the CUIC reporting solution for a Unified CCE environment.
Upon completing this course, the learner will be able to meet these overall objectives:
To fully benefit from this course, students should have the following prerequisite skills and knowledge:
A brief overview of the CUIC product and how to access the administrative interface(s). This course quickly moves into the lab environment where students will do some initial exploration of the Contact Center environment to observe the existing configuration. Understanding a bit of what is going on in your deployment will be paramount to the correct interpretation of your reports. (MicroApps vs. Call Studio Apps, PQ’s or Skill Groups, Call Types, etc.)
Starting off with a Contact Center Supervisor role, students will explore the default behavior and permissions that a Supervisor would inherit by default. Understanding default capabilities for users of the solution will provide a better idea about how to implement some security/control within your reporting environment. Students finish this section by running a stock Agent Team real-time report, noting the Agents within your team(s). The following lab will have you explore several other types of reports typically used, noting the key differences of each (Call Type, Skill Group, PQ, etc.). Students will also be doing some work with basic/advanced filters for reports, and come to understand the need/want to ’personalize’ reports.
A term used for users/groups and security. Although few are interested in controlling policy administration, without it you will end up with a jumbled mess of reports. This lesson includes discussing and implementing Groups, Permissions, and Report Sub-categories so that the ’personalized’ reports are secure and organized.
In this course we distinguish between personalization vs. customization of your reporting environment. Personalization involves everything you could do if you have CUIC Standard. Customization will involve additional (deeper) capabilities of the environment as found with CUIC Premium. This section is dedicated to the personalization aspect - saving stock reports as your own, adding default filters, customizing ’Views’, field thresholds, grouping columns, etc. At the end of this section students will end up with several of reports that better reflect their personal requirements, based on the stock reports that come with the solution.
Value Lists are a List of Values. Collections are a subset of Value Lists. This session contains an explanation of what that means, and why it is important. Students will create their own Collection to use within a report filter.
Creating Dashboards with your favorite Reports, Links, Notes and a Widget or Widgets is the focus of this section. Using Permalinks and popouts will also be a part of the discussion.
This section begins to delve into the ’advanced’ configuration of CUIC with the discussion/customization of stock Report Definitions. Understanding the basic relationship of the Report Definition to the Report is a key component, and includes understanding basic terminology differences like Basic Query, Anonymous Block and Stored Procedures, including why this is important. Students will also spend time with formatting/renaming fields, fields vs. parameters, key fields, and drilldowns.
Per above (Personalization), this section deals with the 2nd half - Customizations. Building on what you have learned so far, this three (3) lab section shows students how to create a new Report Definition and Report from scratch. Students will integrate the Route Call Detail (RCD) and Termination Call Detail (TCD) data into a custom report. The concepts learned here could be applied to any custom reporting need. The labs will guide you through the configuration of a new Report Definition, ultimately implementing an Anonymous Block Query to produce fields and Parameters for a basic RCD query, after which students create and use a custom RCD report. Students continue to customize and personalize this report by implementing Value Lists and Drilldowns to other reports. (FYI: This will be the conclusion of the 2 day section of the course).
Includes a discussion of the big picture of how CUIC fits into your environment - which components of UCCE/PCCE communicate with CUIC and why this is important. Product licensing and deployment models are major topics in this lesson. Many of our students have been surprised in this section to learn that they have more than 1 CUIC server in their environment.
CUIC integrates with CCE (ICM) data sources, and can also be configured to integrate with other data sources, most typically CVP. This may be obvious to some learners depending on their background, what they may not know is the myriad of other settings and configuration options which may affect reporting events from the Gateway all the way thru ICM. Knowing practical tools and methods to find database schema information is a key topic in this section.
By default, CUIC comes with very few reports - even the ’stock’ reports are imported. Students need to know where to go to download new/updated reports for their environment. We will also demonstrate how to easily import these reports into your solution.
Now that the data sources are configured, reports imported, and security is in place, it is time for some Active Directory integration. By following our guidelines, students can now allow the automatic replication of Supervisors into CUIC from Active Directory. If done properly, this allows supervisors to log on to CUIC with a standard ability to run reports and create dashboards, all without any replication of these users within CUIC. Also demonstrated will be other tricks to get your other administrative users added to CUIC.