Setting Queue Priority
Set priority for each of your queues to determine how quickly a call's priority increases while it waits in the queue. When a call is placed in a queue, its priority increases at the rate that you set and gets higher the longer the caller waits. You can set the minimum priority that a call can have in the queue and the maximum priority it can reach while in the queue. For example, if your priority increase rate is 5 every 30 seconds and a caller that enters the queue at a priority value of 1, their priority increases to 6 after waiting 30 seconds in the queue and then to 11 after waiting 60 seconds in the queue.
Callers with a higher priority are routed to available resources before callers with a lower priority. You can set or update your queue's priority rate when you create a queue or make a version of an existing queue. When you create a queue, the default priority values are:
- Min Priority: 1
- Max Priority: 1000
- Increase Rate: 1 every 10 seconds.
Priority Field | Description |
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Min Priority |
This is the minimum value that a caller in the queue can have. The value that you enter must be:
If a caller enters the queue with a priority value that is less than the minimum priority, their priority increases to the minimum value for the queue. If a caller enters the queue with a priority value that is greater than the minimum, they retain their priority and are not reduced to the minimum priority. |
Max Priority |
This is the maximum value that a caller can have in the queue. The value must be:
When the caller's priority increases as they wait in the queue, their priority won't go past the maximum priority set for the queue. |
Priority Value | This is the amount that the caller's priority increases over the specified time. For example, if you want the caller's priority to increase by 5 every 30 seconds, enter "5". |
Priority Rate | This is the time value for the rate of increase. For example, enter "30" if the frequency of increase should be every 30 seconds. |
Priority Unit | This is the unit of time (seconds, minutes, hours, days) for the rate of increase. For example, select seconds if the frequency of increase should be every 30 seconds. |