04-24-2012 12:42 PM - edited 03-21-2019 05:42 AM
when i make a call using one of our sip, the caller id is the person's name who's calling.
But i need to have the company's name instead of the person's name
how can i do this ?
Everything's ok with FXO since it's the telco who's managing this.
thanks
04-24-2012 03:09 PM
I have a script to address this feature, unique to Canada, since a long.
It's called "outbound called name" on my site www.ciscoscripts.com.
Unofrtunatly so far nobody wanted to foot the bill to fund the development.
You can also try a sip profile to change the calling name.
05-02-2012 12:02 PM
anyone else ? i'm sure i'm not the only one who needs to have the business name as the caller ID like a pstn line instead of the employee name
05-09-2012 10:14 AM
I beleave SIP providers will not mannage the Caller ID info, If you have not told the SIP provider what you want the ID to be then they would probably leave it blank, if that is the case then the ID info will be what ever the UC has provided. This at least was the case for our System. You can modify the caller ID on the UC via CCA under call handling
05-09-2012 10:20 AM
where is the option for caller ID under call handling ?
i know that the caller ID use the First Name and Last Name in the user properties, the problem is that I want to have my company name displayed instead of the first and last name of the user.
Also putting the company name in place of first and last name is not an option since i won't know who's calling me since everybody will have company name instead of their name
thanks!
05-15-2012 07:54 AM
help!
05-15-2012 04:16 PM
Hi Tommy,
The only way I can think of that this will work the way you want it to is to do the following:
There is potentially another way, although I have never tried it myself and am not sure if it would be sucessfull and would most likely require heavy CLI adjustment to the system, and this would be using translation rules/profiles to carry it out... I suspect this might be the way Paolo does it with his scripts which is kind of groovy.
Cheers,
David.
Discover and save your favorite ideas. Come back to expert answers, step-by-step guides, recent topics, and more.
New here? Get started with these tips. How to use Community New member guide