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Business Scenarios for Agreements and Entitlements


Agreements for commercial customers and residential customers may be managed differently. To reflect this, this section presents two different business scenarios.

Business Scenario for a Commercial Customer

This scenario shows a sequence of procedures performed by an account manager (end user). Your company may follow a different sequence according to its business needs.

An account manager has been working with a commercial customer for the past two months on an opportunity to supply 100 new subscriptions and rented handsets to the customer's office. Account information for the customer is already present in Siebel eCommunications. Over the past two months, the account manager has created and maintained the opportunity, quotes, and proposals in Siebel eCommunications.

After reviewing several proposals and discussing different offerings and services, the company's owner has accepted the account manager's most recent proposal and has requested a service agreement for the current quote.

First, the account manager creates an agreement record with basic information such as account name, effective date, and a general description of products and services to be covered. He next selects the appropriate terms to add to the agreement and specifies contacts for this agreement. Next, he creates an order. When the order is created, Siebel eCommunications associates the new service with the agreement.

The account manager then uses Siebel eCommunications to generate a physical service agreement. Using a predefined agreement template that the account manager selects, Siebel eCommunications automatically assembles sections from the agreement library and adds the information the account manager entered for the agreement record and its associated terms and contacts. Siebel eCommunications then places the text in a Microsoft Word document. If necessary, the account manager can manually edit the Word document to personalize it for the customer.

Finally, the account manager prints the finished service agreement for the owner's approval and signature.

Figure 7 shows the sequence of procedures that might be used to manage commercial agreements.

Figure 7.  Example of Sequence for Agreements (Commercial)

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Business Scenario for a Residential Customer

This scenario shows a sequence of procedures performed by a customer service representative (end user) at a local office. Your company may follow a different sequence according to its business needs.

A residential customer with an existing service agreement decides to purchase a wireless handset for her daughter. She visits an authorized dealer to complete this transaction. The dealer looks up her agreement in the dealer's back-office system, which is connected to Siebel eCommunications at Greenwich Mean Time (GMT).

The dealer then creates the order in Siebel eCommunications. When the order is created, Siebel eCommunications associates the new service for the daughter with the mother's agreement. When the order is complete, Siebel eCommunications automatically updates the agreement with the new service. Finally, Siebel eCommunications issues requests to the appropriate back-office applications to provision the daughter's new wireless service.

Figure 8 shows the sequence of procedures that might be used to manage residential agreements.

Figure 8.  Example of Sequence for Agreements (Residential)

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 Siebel eCommunications Guide 
 Published: 23 June 2003