MIT Enviro-monitor Suite - User Guide
Contents
- 1 General Introduction
- 1.1 Overview
- 2 UCentric
- 2.1 Introduction
- 2.1.1 Logging into the system
- 2.2 The Main View
- 2.3 Widgets
- 2.4 Agent Status
- 2.1 Introduction
- 3 UCentric People
- 3.1 Behavioural Reporting
- 3.1.1 Detailed Search
- 3.1.1.1 Viewing the results
- 3.1.1.2 Highlighting outliers
- 3.1.1.3 Drilling Down
- 3.1.2 A day in the life
- 3.1.3 Standard Deviations
- 3.1.4 Dataset Comparisons
- 3.1.5 Timeline Search
- 3.1.6 Team Comparison
- 3.1.7 Working Hours
- 3.1.8 Metadata Tag Activity
- 3.1.9 Events in progress
- 3.1.10 Clustering
- 3.1.1 Detailed Search
- 3.1 Behavioural Reporting
- 4 UCentric Property
- 4.1 Environmental Reports
- 4.1.1 Temperature
- 4.2 Property Reports
- 4.2.1 Building Access
- 4.2.2 Building Access (Blueprint)
- 4.1 Environmental Reports
- 5 Administration
General Introduction
Overview
UCentric is a suite of data capture tools and a resource analysis system that allows a comprehensive examination of multiple data sources for a number of purposes and is split into several categories. The data sources can include: -
Building Access Card data
Environmental Data
Plus much, much more!
UCentric is designed to be extensible and allow data from any source.
UCentric People provides key metrics on the performance of departments and individuals, and provides a comprehensive set of reports to show all activity that involves users. It can generate KPI style reports, Standard Deviations and like-for-like comparisons with the own users activity or between individuals and teams of individuals.
UCentric Property provides detailed movement information about users throughout multiple locations using magnetic or RFID access data. In addition to this, the property module can monitor environmental systems and provide details of unused resources within a physical location.
UCentric
Introduction
UCentric People allows you to report on a number of metrics in a highly visual manner. The data captured by UCentric People falls loosely into the following categories:-
Access Records
Magnetic / RFID access cards
VPN / RAS logon attempts
Logging into the system
As with UCentric Voice, visit the appropriate URL for the UCentric Web Server
Locally: http://127.0.0.1/ucentric
Remotely: To access remotely replace the IP address in the above link with the hostname or IP address of the system UCentric is installed upon.
Once you have browsed to the web interface you will be greeted with the below window, here you can log in using an UCentric account. These are usually created during installation for you or can be created by an Administrator, default users are also available.
Once logged in you will be presented with the ‘Portal’ and any ‘Widgets’ that are active for your profile.
The Main View
The main portal view of UCentric displays the ‘Agents’ that are capturing data into the platform, along with some tickers that show real-time activity.
The left of the page has a tool bar displaying the reports and actions available for each aspect of UCentric.
In the example shown above, you can see that there are a number of ‘tenants’ with multiple locations and data capture agents. To the right of the screen, a real-time display shows the events captured from the agents and any legacy Novalog platforms.
The toolbar to the left provides access to the reports, complete with a ‘quick search’ and ‘NLP search’ option for locating devices / users and for selecting simple reports using plain English.
Widgets
The widgets can be added to the main portal screen by double-clicking in open space or by selecting “add widgets” from the right-hand collapsed menu bar. This will display a pop-up selector that allows you to add any available widgets
Dragging the header of a widget allows it to be re-positioned within the main dashboard.
The widgets selected and their position is unique to each user and retained between logins.
Agent Status
The Live Agent status screen provides a simple mechanism to ensure that all data is being captured across the network from your disparate business systems. When operating live, brief statistics are shown.
UCentric People
Behavioural Reporting
Detailed Search
This allows you to search for specific events easily, and then filter the results to suit.
The Users and Departments selectors are intellisense, and will filter as you type. The Source Event types
default to “Phone” and “Trunk” events, but can include a number of other event types as shown here.
Clicking on the green and red boxes will select all or clear the selection.
The date range can changed in a number of ways using the buttons highlighted in the image to the right. The calendar icon will pop up a simple calendar selector. The -/+ buttons will select the next/previous month and the quick date drop-down provides standard date ranges.
For selection boxes with two sets of dates you can use the
icons to copy the selections from the top to the bottom of the selection pane.
Viewing the results
Once the results are shown on screen there are a number of ways to export and manipulate the data.
The
icon in the search parameters will collapse that view to provide more real-estate for the rest of the report.
The search filter allows you to exclude certain types of events from the result set, and provides the ability to export all records (in this case 657 events) to an Excel spreadsheet or PDF documents. The PDF and Excel icons shown in the search parameters table will only export the current view (25 records)
Highlighting outliers
Within the detailed report, “Outliers” can be identified by hovering over the Duration, Ans Time and Cost columns headings. When doing so records that fall outside of the standard deviation will be highlighted – essentially highlighting the longest, worst answer time and most expensive calls and events that have been captured.
Drilling Down
Clicking on a single event will shown any linked records associated with the individual record.
If multiple records are associated with each other, the view will look more like this
And clicking on the
button will show the same information graphically
A day in the life
This report is designed to provide an overall snapshot of the performance of one or more individuals.
The search parameters are simply the date range, user or departments you wish to see and which blueprint / wireframe document to show any movements on.
The information is broken down into 3 areas; “Activity” – showing the total number of different event types within 4 hour blocks. “Dispersion of data” – showing what activities have taken place on a minute-by-minute basis and a 3D model of a building / location showing heat-map movement when the slider is used.
Clicking on any one of the icons in the Activity pane will display a pop-up timeline of that category of events:
Standard Deviations
The standard deviation report allows you to compare performance of an individual or group of people against another individual or group. The
The search pane therefore is a little more detailed:
You will notice some arrows
next to the date selection. These simply copy the selected date from the top to the bottom and visa-versa to save entering the same information twice when comparing the same period.
This report allows differing periods and groups of people to be compared in a very visual manner.
The resultant report shows banding where the metrics are outside of the standard deviation for the target group compared to the source for duration, time-to-answer and cost.
The image shown below highlights the variance expected versus the data retrieved for the target.
This can be explained as follows:
You can quickly see that everything in the green band is ‘normal’ compared to the control set, and everything in the red band is ‘abnormal’
Dataset Comparisons
Dataset Comparisons differ from standard deviations in that they allow differing types of data to be compared. An example of this is below where we can compare the telephone traffic against the ambient temperature of the office.
The source parameters can include event types, source and destination names or numbers and even specific agents.
The target is the agent data you wish to compare against (usually a single source such as an environmental sensor) and the metric allows you to select from
several different comparative methods.
The telephone and trunk records are shown in the left-hand scale, whilst the ambient temperature is shown in the right. You can see that this data only has temperature readings for part of the day.
Timeline Search
The timeline search provides a means to visually determine all activity from all sources within a particular time window and then explore that data.
When selecting the data, you can specify a number of different parameters, but be aware that the timeline view will limit to the first 200 records, so you should use the parameters to filter the data as required.
When the timeline view is first shown, you may see narrow bands of colour – this is normal and indicates lots of records overlapping.
By using the mouse wheel you can zoom the view
By dragging the timeline up and down you can see other simultaneous activity and clicking on an item with display the same associated records and cloud view.
To increase the view-port size, use the
icons on the search parameters and Timeline windows to resize the view.
In addition to the main timeline view, you can also view the events in a vertical sequential view by clicking on the
button at the bottom of the timeline view.
The vertical timeline will then appear in a pop-up window, ordered by most recent events at the top.
Use the mouse wheel or cursor/page up/down to scroll through the events.
Team Comparison
The Team Comparison report provides a very easy side-by-side comparison of activity of different types between two groups of people.
As with the other reports, you can select a source user or team of users and a user or team to compare against. The report is split into two halves, the first showing a Team 1 vs Team 2 view of the different metrics captured, and the second shows two graphs with the same metrics overlaid.
Working Hours
The Working hours report is predicated on the users being correctly configured with their ‘normal’ working hours, i.e. 09:00 – 17:00, Mon to Fri.
Once this information is known, it is easy to then overlay their activity and highlight under or over working.
The activity for each user is then shown in a calendar format, with three icons overlaid onto the report
= Working during their expected hours
= Working additional unexpected hours
= Not working when expected to do so.
This then allows an ‘Overall work rate’ of 68% to be calculated as shown in the above example. In reality you would expect an overall working rate of ~75% due to lunch, rest breaks etc., but in addition to providing visual activity over a working week, the Working Hours report can also highlight unusual access and activity by an employee outside of normal working hours.
Metadata Tag Activity
The Metadata tag activity provides a visual representation of the different types of data being captured for individuals or teams of people
The main view shows dials with the different types of data being captured
With individual charts for each type of source showing the activity spread over the chosen reporting period
Events in progress
The Events in Progress report will detail a minute-by-minute graph (and average graph) of all events (you can filter these within the search parameters) in order to obtain a view of the overall activity of the systems being monitored
Clustering
Clustering allows you to compare two differing metrics within the data and highlight pattern clusters within it. As an example, comparing duration vs. cost reveals a fairly obvious pattern.
But answer time vs. duration doesn’t appear as intuitive.
The report will allow you to compare any two of the following subsets of data: Day of week/month, hour of day, month of year, 5 min intervals, cost, duration, answer time, source type, source, destination type, destination, measurement, geographic location, dialling code and charging tier.
UCentric Property
Environmental Reports
Temperature
The Temperature report provides a simple visual report that highlights the average and minimum/maximum temperature within a given location over a chosen period of time.
The generated report uses coloured bands to show the accepted heat levels.
Property Reports
Building Access
The Building Access report uses Magnetic card, RFID or keypad data to identify access to a location by an individual or collection of users. This can be used for security, scoping hot desk requirements or managing fire escape routes.
The main report is split into two tables – a simple “Entry”, “Internal” and “Exit”, with a ‘staff present’ value at the end of each row, and a floor-by-hour heat-map of access throughout the day.
Clocking on upper table will drill down to a heat-map for a specific floor, and clicking on the heatmap will drill-down to the specific hour selected and show the users who are accessing the building.
Building Access (Blueprint)
Like the former report, this produces the same information, but in addition allows you to view the data as a blueprint of a building or campus location.
The Search parameters allow the inclusion of a blueprint document, which when viewed, provides a 3D model of the data that can be manipulated with the mouse and keyboard.
Using the slider will show activity throughout the day as an animated heat-model of the location
and the mouse buttons and wheel allow you to pan/zoom/rotate the image.
Pressing the
button will move the slider automatically at 2 mins / second rate, and the
button disables the colour heat-mapping so you can see the layout clearly.
Administration
UCentric User Structure
The UCentric User Structure allows the system to understand how the data captured should be allocated to a particular user (or device) and what data particular users are permitted to view. This is split into 2 key areas
The first option provides access to the web portal in order to run reports, and the latter two options define the users within the systems that are being monitored.
Manage Web Logins
When selecting this option, a list of the existing logins is shown
Clicking on any individual will bring up the user login profile editor
The first half of the pane provides basic user settings such as user name, password and the applications that the user is permitted to access. The 2nd half provides more detailed restrictions for both UCentric and other legacy MIT applications
From here you can restrict the locations and sites/systems that the user will have access to when logging into the Web Portal.
The following restrictions can be made:-
UCentric Restrictions: “Tenant” (for multi-tenanted systems)
“Location” (or ‘Site’)
“Agents” (specific data sources)
“Users” (Specific user data)
“Departments” (Specific department data)
UCentric Voice Audit: “Audit Sites” – These restrict views to specific branches of the tree
Classic Restrictions: This restricts the legacy sites, departments and extensions visible in Novalog
MiSMS: This restricts the site or node (tree branch) visible to the user
When a “node” or “branch” restriction is applied, this means that a user can see all sites in and below the selected branch or node. This is useful for partitioning access to a system within a single organisation.