Cisco demonstrated a similar pattern at Cisco Live Amsterdam 2026 in the session “Boosting Customer Experience with Flow Orchestration in Webex Contact Center” (BRKCCT-2345). This post is written in the spirit of that demo and expands on the same core idea: when routing logic starts to sprawl across the canvas, a Function can make the flow cleaner, easier to read, and easier to maintain.
Welcome Message
Welcome to my blog about Cisco Collaboration, voice, and contact center technologies.
I’m Dmytro Benda, a Cisco instructor (CCSI#33268) and collaboration specialist. Here I share practical articles, lab notes, configuration tips, and troubleshooting ideas based on real work with Cisco Unified Communications Manager, Unified CME, gateways, CUBE, and contact center solutions.
This blog is for engineers, students, and anyone working with Cisco collaboration technologies who wants clear technical content and real-world examples. I also post updates about Cisco training, my own courses, and upcoming learning activities.
If you have a question related to a post, a technology covered here, or Cisco training, feel free to get in touch.
Thursday, April 16, 2026
Tuesday, April 7, 2026
How to Pass Custom Data from a Webex CC Voice Flow to an Autonomous AI Agent
One of the most common questions I get when working with Autonomous AI Agents in Webex Contact Center is this:
“How can I pass custom data from the voice flow to my Autonomous AI Agent?”
For a long time, this was a challenge because the feature was not supported. Recently, Cisco changed that, and now it is possible. Let me show you how it works.
Wednesday, April 1, 2026
Webex Connect Receive Node Triggered by Typing Indicators
While working on a chat flow in Webex Connect Standalone, I ran into something that at first looked like a bug in my logic, but turned out to be behavior tied to how the Receive node handles input events. Btw, the same problem may happen if you try to build a Webex Connect flow in Webex CC from scratch.