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Business Scenario for Service Requests and Trouble Tickets


This scenario shows a sequence of procedures performed by a customer service representative (end user) and a workflow manager (administrator). Your company may follow a different sequence according to its business requirements.

A customer service representative (CSR) receives a call from the owner of a software company. He is phoning from his mobile phone and explains that he has no dial tone on his office phone. The CSR verifies the customer's service configuration and identifies the specific phone line to which he is referring.

The CSR creates a trouble ticket and attempts to use the problem resolution capabilities in Siebel eCommunications to resolve the customer's problem. The CSR is unable to solve the problem and passes the trouble ticket to the Network Services Group. The CSR ends the call and creates a follow-up activity on the trouble ticket.

Two minutes later, the CSR receives a broadcast message indicating that there is a circuit break that is affecting customers in a particular exchange. The CSR looks up the network-reported problem for the circuit outage and finds the specific trouble ticket. The trouble ticket details indicate that a construction crew sliced through a cable that carries network traffic for the exchange. The estimated repair time is five hours.

The CSR performs a search in Siebel eCommunications to find all open trouble tickets that have a service item equivalent to the affected exchange. The search produces a list of 15 trouble tickets, including the network-reported trouble ticket.

The CSR associates each of the 14 customer-reported trouble tickets with the one network-reported trouble ticket for the following reasons:

The CSR assigns the network trouble ticket for the cable break to a technician in the Repair and Maintenance department and receives a message from the on-site maintenance crew that the cable has been repaired and tested and is fully operational. The technician creates a series of notes in the network trouble ticket, indicating the resolution, and closes the trouble ticket.

When the technician closes the parent trouble ticket, the child trouble tickets are not automatically closed since it may be necessary to verify that each customer's problem has been fixed. Because your administrator has configured it to do so, Siebel eCommunications determines that the trouble ticket for the customer described above can be closed. It then sends a text message to the customer's mobile phone notifying him of the resolution.

At the end of the day, the manager examines all of the trouble tickets generated that day.

Figure 15 shows the sequence of procedures that end users might follow to manage trouble tickets.

Figure 15.  Example of Sequence for Trouble Tickets

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 Siebel eCommunications Guide 
 Published: 23 June 2003