This article describes how preferred agent routing works for various routing and agent scenarios.
When an agent blind transfers or consult transfers an interaction set with preferred agents, the system no longer considers those preferred agents during the transfer.
If you use bullseye routing along with preferred agent routing, the system considers preferred agents first, regardless of whether they have the required skills.
Score preferred agents in Architect. You can score agents in a range from 0 to 100. The higher the score, the more preferred the agent. Multiple agents can have the same score.
Preferred agent routing is not compatible with workforce management scheduling and forecasting.
Last agent routing does not work for email if you use email flows. It works only if you send the email directly to a queue. For more information, see Email routing and preferred agent routing in overview.
For email and messaging interactions, and inbound callbacks, with preferred agent routing the system no longer attempts to route the interaction to the last agent who handled it. Scheduled callbacks, however, are unaffected by preferred agent routing.
For more information, see .
Preferred agent routing only routes an interaction to preferred agents who belong to the queue in which the system routes the interaction. Agents who do not belong to the queue do not receive routed interactions, even if you designate them as preferred agents.
Single preferred agent specified (timeout ignored)
Multiple preferred agents specified (timeout not ignored)
The system only routes interactions to agents who are active on a specific queue, and ignores inactive agents. If an agent becomes active on a specific queue while the system attempts to route an interaction to preferred agents, then the system includes the newly activated agent in the pool.
The system only routes to agents who are on queue. For example, it does not route interactions to preferred agents who are on break.
The system routes interactions to preferred agents first, regardless of whether they have the required ACD skills and language skills.
When a preferred agent is fully utilized, the system does not route interactions to that agent. If the agent is not fully utilized during the configured preferred agent timeout, then the system considers them for routing. For more information, see .
Interactions with higher priority take precedence over preferred agent routings. For example, if an agent is available and has an interaction that lists them as a preferred agent in the queue, but another interaction in the queue has higher priority, then the system first routes the higher priority interaction to the agent.
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