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What is Looker?
Looker is Google's BI tool for visualizing and displaying data. For more information about Looker, see the Looker resources page.
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title | Embedded viewVonage's Analytics Dashboards uses Looker's embedded view. Not all of the functionality in Looker's default experience as described in the documentation is available in the embedded view. |
What are dashboards?
A dashboard is a collection of tiles, displaying data about agent events or interaction events. Analytics Dashboards offers two types of dashboards:
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What are tiles?
A tile is a single item on a dashboard. Tiles can be one of two types:
Text tiles contain static text.
Visualization tiles contain configured data and have various configuration options. For more information see What visualization options are available for tile? section later this page.
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What data can be displayed in tiles?
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A tile can contain one type of data at any time—agents time—agents events or interaction events.
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Agent events
Each row of data represents a single event for an agent. Agent events can be one of two types—presence and interaction—and each event also has a category:
Presence
Ready
Away
ExtendedAway
LoggedOut
Interaction
Ringing
Connected
Wrap
Unexpected
Failed
Other agent event data includes start time and date, duration of event, and agent ID. Average, maximum, and minimum duration, and count measures are also available.
For a complete list of agent event fields and their descriptions, see Agent Events fields.
Interaction events
Each row of data represents a represents a single interaction. Interactions Interactions can have channels, events, start and end dates, and so on. Interactions have many more dimensions and measures than agent events.
For a complete list of interactions fields and their descriptions, see Interaction Events fields.
Interaction model
Interaction event data describes every call or other type of interaction in a 4-layer structure, each with its own properties or fields:
Interactions
Each interaction has information applicable to the interaction as a whole. Information includes when it started, its status—completed, ongoing, internal error—and its direction—inbound, outbound or internal.
Interactions have one or more channels:Channels
A channel represents a party who is connected or attempted to be connected to the interaction. If a party leaves and rejoins, there are two channel instances associated with that party. A party can be external, an agent, or a monitor (a supervisor monitoring an interaction).
Channels have one or more channel events:Channel Events
A channel event represents each human or system activity instigated by or affecting the channel—party—or the interaction. Examples of channel events include Ringing, DeliveryFailed, Connected, Applet, Queue, Held, CallRecording, Disposition, Wrap. Multiple channel events can occur at the same time. For example, a Held channel event can occur within a Connected channel event.
Each channel event has a type, an offset (by default, in milliseconds from the start of the interaction), and a duration (by default, in milliseconds). Queue, Applet and some other events carry a Customer-defined NameChannel Event Properties
Some channel events, specifically Queue channel events, have additional properties. A queue channel event has a result—for example, HangUp, Delivered or a range of breakouts—a list of presented skills, and virtual queue (or agreement) names.
All interactions have a conversation GUID. A conversation GUID connects all interactions that make up a conversation. For example, a conversation may contain an initial phone call and a callback—both interactions will have the same conversation GUID, but different interaction GUID.
What visualization options are available for tiles?
Tiles display data in different forms, or visualizations. Visualizations Visualizations can be divided to different types, where each type has different settings you can use to customize its look. Different data works better in some visualizations than others.
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Visualizations can be of following types:
Cartesian charts
Column
Bar
Scatterplot
Line
Area
Pie and donut charts
Pie
Donut Multiples
Progression charts
Funnel
Timeline
Waterfall
Text and table
Single Value
Single Record
Table
Table (Legacy)
Word Cloud
Maps
Map
Static Map (Regions)
Static Map (Points)
Other charts
Boxplot
For detailed information about each Looker's visualization types, see Visualization types (Looker help).
Where does data come from?
Analytics Dashboards are powered by the same data used in Dashboards—Insights Stats API.
Who can access Analytics Dashboards?
Users can have either view or create access to Analytics Dashboards.
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Users who do not have an access to Analytics Dashboards can still benefit from its data. You can schedule delivery of dashboards to any user, by providing their email addresses. For more information, see the Scheduling delivery a dashboard section in Using Analytics Dashboards.
What are the current limitations of Analytics Dashboards?
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