Specifications

18-26
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 Broadcast Messages
Message ID: JMX0637L023-NM-FOC08221WRB-731183375855
Sender: User2
Recipient(s): UserB, 95550041 (External)
Length(sec): 20
Delivery time: Wed, 13 April 2006 10:15:00-0800 (PST)
se-10-0-0-0# show voicemail msg-notification restriction-table
Restriction Table: msg-restriction
Minimum digits allowed: 1
Maximum digits allowed: 30
Dial Strings:
Preference Call Pattern Allowed
1 19000... yes
2 170000 yes
3 * yes
Configuring Broadcast Messages
This chapter describes the procedures for configuring the networking capability on the local
Cisco Unity Express voice-mail system and contains the following sections:
Overview of Broadcast Messages, page 26 (optional)
Configuring Broadcast Messages, page 27 (optional)
Enabling the MWI Lights for Broadcast Messages, page 28 (optional)
Displaying Broadcast Messages, page 29 (optional)
Deleting a Broadcast Message, page 30 (optional)
Changing Broadcast Message Start and End Times, page 30 (optional)
Disabling Broadcast Privileges for a Group, page 31 (optional)
Disabling MWI Lights for Broadcast Messages, page 31 (optional)
Configuring the Local-Broadcast Privilege, page 31 (optional)
Overview of Broadcast Messages
Cisco Unity Express permits sending broadcast messages to local and remote network locations.
Cisco Unity Express permits subscribers with the broadcast privilege to send local and network
broadcast messages. Subscribers obtain this privilege as members of a group that has the broadcast
privilege.
Sending a broadcast message is available through the Cisco Unity Express telephone user
interface (TUI).
The broadcast message sender has the option to readdress, rerecord, and review the message before
sending it out. The sender also can set the start and end times for the message and the number of days
the broadcast message plays before the system deletes it. The maximum life of a broadcast message is
365 days. The default message lifetime is 30 days.
The sender can include any or all of the remote locations configured on the local system. The remote
addresses can be location numbers or location names. When using the location name, the number of
matches may resolve into several locations. If the number of locations is less than or equal to 4, the
system gives the sender the option to select the exact location. If the number of matches is greater than 4,
the sender must enter more letters to narrow the search.