This visual guide is part of a collection of documents created by the One Student One ERP (OSOE) project in collaboration with Institut Mines Telecom, Telecom Bretagne, Dresden University of Technology and the South Westfalia University of Applied Sciences. It can be used to teach modern ERP theory and practice to undergraduate students or professionals.
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As introduced in the previous tutorial "Events", incoming Events are created either from external or internal of your company. When your company receives an email, a fax or a phone call from external , you can create a new incoming Event by declaring the incoming message as received . When it is necessary to exchange between departments of your company an outgoing Event created by internal of your company which has been sent, eg, to assign it to a Support Request Ticket, you can also declare the outgoing message as received , then follow the Incoming Event Workflow to handle it.
In this tutorial, we will explain in detail the effects of the Declare as Received , Define the Event's Recipient , Create a Follow Up Ticket and Deliver actions.
In next tutorial, we will use the Support Requests-a kind of Ticket created from incoming Events, as an example to explain precisely to you how to apply this standard process to ERP5 CRM.
Here is the standard Event workflow of ERP5. As introduced in the previous tutorial "Events", the incoming Events (second part of this illustration) can either be created manually (eg, you can input an email which is a support request or a reply from a customer to ERP5 team as a new incoming Event), or automatically (eg, between 2 departments who use the same ERP5 system, an Event can be exchanged by calling the Action "Declare as Received" . If an Event is initially outgoing for department A-the sender, it becomes incoming for department B-the recipient, once A has sent the Event and declared it as received).
The standard process of how to process incoming Event:
1.
Firstly, we will
Declare as Received
an incoming Event from external of our company, or an outgoing Event sent by our company but needs to be exchanged between different departments of our company.
2.
Secondly, we have to
Define the Recipient
in order to indicate who in our team will be responsible to handle the Event.
3.
Thirdly, if the Event needs to be handled in a serious way, eg, an mail message from a client concerning a product problem, we will need to
Create Follow Up Ticket
in order to record all the interactions related to the original Event which will happen afterwards between the Event operators in our team and the Event sender. We also have to
Define the Ticket's Operation Manager, the Supervisor and the Operators
to indicate who will be responsible for this Ticket.
4.
Finally, the person who is defined as the "Recipient" of the Event will see it in his worklist, and
Deliver
the Event to acknowledge that he is responsible for this incoming Event and he will handle it later.
Note that during the process, we can Change the Recipient of this Event to assign another team member to handle it.
For more information, please contact Jean-Paul, CEO of Rapid.Space (+33 629 02 44 25).