Scenarios where the email parser would create known vs. unknown tickets
Question
How do unknown tickets get created vs. known tickets in BMS?
Answer
Below is a summary of scenarios as to when the parser will create known vs. unknown tickets:
- email@support.com sends an email to the email parser:
- email@support.com does not exist in BMS under CRM > Contacts.
- This will result in an unknown ticket.
- email@support.com sends an email to the email parser:
- email@support.com does not exist in BMS under CRM > Contacts.
- support.com is however defined as a valid domain name under CRM > Accounts.
- This will result in a known ticket.
- email@support.com sends an email to the email parser:
- email@support.com is a known contact in BMS
- This will result in a known ticket.
- email@support.com sends an email to the email parser:
- email@support.com is a known contact in BMS but it exists under two different CRM accounts.
- This will result in an unknown ticket.
- email@support.com sends an email to the email parser:
- email@support.com is a known contact in BMS > CRM > Account "Microsoft."
- support.com is defined as a valid domain name in CRM > Account "Oracle."
- This will result in an unknown ticket.
- email@support.com sends an email to the email parser:
- email@support.com is a known contact in BMS.
- email@support.com is defined as an employee in BMS.
- This will result in a known ticket.
- email@support.com sends an email to the email parser:
- email@support.com is defined only as an employee in BMS.
- This will result in an unknown ticket.
Applies to: BMS email parser