Specifications
18-21
Cisco Unity Express Voice-Mail and Auto-Attendant CLI Administrator Guide for 3.0 and Later Versions
OL-14010-09
Chapter 18 Configuring Advanced Voice Mail
Configuring the Delivery of Future Messages
Dial Strings:
Preference Call Pattern Allowed
1 19000... yes
2 170000 yes
3 * yes
Configuring the Delivery of Future Messages
Cisco Unity Express subscribers may create and schedule voice-mail messages for future delivery to one
or more subscribers on the local system or on configured remote network locations.
You do not need to configure this feature for subscribers.
Subscribers can schedule message delivery for up to 1 year in advance.
Senders can readdress, rerecord, and review the message before scheduling it for delivery. After the
system confirms the date and time for the future delivery, the sender cannot change or delete the
message.
You can display and delete messages marked for future delivery.
A subscriber can schedule any number of messages for future delivery if the subscriber’s mailbox has
enough space. The system counts all the sender’s future messages against the sender’s quota until a
message is sent. After a future message is delivered, it is counted against the recipient’s quota.
The following sections describe this feature:
• Permitted Subscribers, page 21
• Message Delivery Time, page 21
• System Status Impact, page 22
• Unsuccessful Message Delivery, page 22
• Loss of Future Messages, page 22
• Incorrect Message Delivery, page 22
• Backup and Restore of Future Messages, page 23
• Displaying and Deleting Future Messages, page 23
Permitted Subscribers
No special privileges are required to use this feature.
All subscribers configured on the system have access to this feature.
Message Delivery Time
Any change or drift in the system time impacts the message delivery. For example, a sender schedules a
message for a 4:00 p.m. delivery when the system time is 3:00 p.m.
• If the system time jumps ahead by 15 minutes, the system delivers the message at its new 4:00 p.m.
Only 45 minutes, not 1 hour, separates the original scheduling of the message delivery and the actual
delivery.
• If the system clock falls behind by 15 minutes, the system delivers the message at 4:00 p.m., which
is 1 hour and 15 minutes from the time of the original scheduling.