I am in the middle of a new CCM implementation (replacing our old servers with new models, not restoring from backup, putting all info in fresh), and am curious as to how other people have set up their route plans using NANP (we're in the Chicago area). I want to revamp and redesign our route plan; it was one consultants set up for us years ago, and it's a bit less restrictive than I'd like. I would love to get other people's feedback on:
- Do you use route filters or explicit route patterns?
- How do you block international numbers that are within the NANP (Canada, Puerto Rico, etc.)?
- Do you make special provisions for in-state calling, i.e. do you have a separate partition/CSS for state area codes vs. local area codes?
- How many route patterns do you have in your system, if you're using explicit route patterns?
My bosses have accused me of overthinking this, but I think it's better to have restrictions in place then to get caught with a huge phone bill because 600 of our users discovered they can direct-dial Canada even though they only, theoretically, have access to U.S. long-distance numbers (long story).
Any feedback/info/insight would be greatly appreciated.
TMH
- Do you use route filters or explicit route patterns?
- How do you block international numbers that are within the NANP (Canada, Puerto Rico, etc.)?
- Do you make special provisions for in-state calling, i.e. do you have a separate partition/CSS for state area codes vs. local area codes?
- How many route patterns do you have in your system, if you're using explicit route patterns?
My bosses have accused me of overthinking this, but I think it's better to have restrictions in place then to get caught with a huge phone bill because 600 of our users discovered they can direct-dial Canada even though they only, theoretically, have access to U.S. long-distance numbers (long story).
Any feedback/info/insight would be greatly appreciated.
TMH