Specifications

Managing Mobility Enterprise Locations
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ShoreTel Mobility Router Administration Guide 105
Enterprise Locations
About Enterprise Locations
An enterprise location consists of a campus, a series of buildings, and all the floors where the ShoreTel
Mobility solution is deployed. Figure 47 shows an example of an enterprise location. In this example,
the campus has three buildings, and each building has two floors. The campus layout is entered as an
enterprise location in the Mobility Router. For information about creating enterprise locations, see
“Creating Campuses” on page 110.
Figure 47: Sample Enterprise Location Layout
About Route Points
A Route Point is a specific location within the campus where you want to handover between Wi-Fi and
cellular. Some common route points include the entry/exit points of a building, at the entrance to an
elevator, or at the entrance to a stairwell. If a building has a unique shape, Wi-Fi coverage might not
reach to some remote corners of the floor.
Areas where the Wi-Fi signal has a received signal strength indication (RSSI) threshold below the level
acceptable for voice calls should be marked as Route Points. If there are no locations on a given floor
of a building where a handover needs to take place, you do not need to create Route Points on the
Mobility Router for that floor.
Route Points can be predefined or created during the calibration process. Calibrate Route Points by
taking readings of Wi-Fi signal strength using the ShoreTel Mobility Calibrate tool. For information
about using the ShoreTel Mobility Calibrate application, refer to the “Using the ShoreTel Mobility
Calibration Tool” application note.
Figure 48 shows the first floor of Building One. There are four places where Route Points could be
created. These places are entered into the Enterprise Location menu as Route Points for this specific
building and floor. For information about adding Route Points, see “Creating Route Points for a Floor”