Digital receptionists (IVR)
A digital receptionist answers with a recorded prompt — "press 1 for sales, 2 for support" — and routes callers by keypress, with sensible handling for silence and wrong keys.
Creating a digital receptionist
Admin → Call Distribution → Add IVR. Set the extension number (fixed once created), a name, and the prompt language (English, Spanish, French or German — this selects the system prompt set for anything the IVR itself says).
The prompt
Upload the greeting as a WAV file — PCM, 8 kHz, 16-bit, mono, up to 10 MB. Any audio tool can export that format; keep menus short and front-load the options callers actually want (they can press before the prompt finishes). The greeting comes from the shared audio prompts library, so you can upload it here or record it straight from a phone.
Menu options and destinations
Each key 0–9 gets an action: connect to an extension, queue, ring group, another IVR, an external number, or voicemail; repeat the prompt; or open the name directory (callers spell a name to reach a person). Keys left on Nothing count as invalid input.
Allow callers to dial extensions (on by default) lets a caller who knows an extension just dial it during the menu — turn it off for strictly-menu flows.
Timeout and invalid input
- No input — after the timeout (default 60 seconds) the call goes to the configured send call to destination, so silence never strands a caller.
- Invalid input — repeat the prompt (default), end the call, or forward to a destination.
Multi-level menus
Point a key at another IVR to nest menus ("press 2 for support" → a second menu for product lines). Keep it to two levels where you can — every layer costs callers patience — and give inner menus a key that returns to a human (a queue or ring group) rather than dead-ending.
Office hours and after-hours menus
Receptionists honor office hours with their own overrides for closed, break and holiday periods — accept anyway, end the call, or forward (optionally after an announcement). The common pattern is two receptionists: the day menu, and a night menu whose prompt sets expectations ("we're closed, press 1 to leave a message") — with the day IVR's closed-hours action forwarding to the night one.