Plivo lets you automate voice surveys for use cases such as collecting feedback from customers and conducting polling on political issues. You can set up multiple levels of questions and walk users through different paths depending on the keys they press in response to your questions, and save the responses for analysis.
You can implement voice surveys either by using our PHLO visual workflow builder or our APIs and XML documents. Follow the instructions in one of the tabs below.
You can create and deploy a PHLO to automate voice surveys with a few clicks on the PHLO canvas, and trigger it with a few lines of code.
To get started, you need a Plivo account — sign up with your work email address if you don’t have one already. If this is your first time triggering a PHLO with Ruby, follow our instructions to set up a Ruby development environment.
To create a PHLO, visit the PHLO page of the Plivo console. If this is your first PHLO, the PHLO page will be empty.
Click Create New PHLO.
In the Choose your use case pop-up, click Build my own. The PHLO canvas will appear with the Start node.
Validate the configuration by clicking Validate. Every time you finish configuring a node, click Validate to check the syntax and save your changes.
From the list of components on the left side, drag and drop the Initiate Call component onto the canvas. This adds an Initiate Call node onto the canvas. When a component is placed on the canvas it becomes a node.
Repeat the process with another IVR Menu node. Rename it Question_2.
Drag and drop the Play Audio component onto the canvas. Draw a line to connect the Question_2 node‘s 1 and 2 trigger states to the Play Audio node.
Drag and drop the HTTP Request component onto the canvas. Draw a line to connect the Acknowledge_Participation node‘s Prompt Completed trigger state to the HTTP Request node.
Your PHLO is now ready to test.
You integrate a PHLO into your application workflow by making an API request to trigger the PHLO with the required payload — the set of parameters you pass to the PHLO. You can define a static payload by specifying values when you create the PHLO, or define a dynamic payload by passing values through parameters when you trigger the PHLO from your application.
When you configure values when creating the PHLO, they act as a static payload.
Create a file called trigger_phlo.rb
and paste into it this code.
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require 'rubygems'
require 'plivo'
include Plivo
AUTH_ID = '<auth_id>'
AUTH_TOKEN = '<auth_token>'
client = Phlo.new(AUTH_ID, AUTH_TOKEN)
# if credentials are stored in the PLIVO_AUTH_ID and the PLIVO_AUTH_TOKEN environment variables
# then initialize client as:
# client = Phlo.new
begin
phlo = client.phlo.get('<phlo_id>')
response = phlo.run()
puts response
rescue PlivoRESTError => e
puts 'Exception: ' + e.message
end
Replace the auth placeholders with your authentication credentials from the Plivo console. Replace the phlo_id placeholder with your PHLO ID from the Plivo console.
To use dynamic values for the parameters, use Liquid templating parameters when you create the PHLO and pass the values from your code to the PHLO when you trigger it.
Create a file called trigger_phlo.rb
and paste into it this code.
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require 'rubygems'
require 'plivo'
include Plivo
AUTH_ID = '<auth_id>'
AUTH_TOKEN = '<auth_token>'
client = Phlo.new(AUTH_ID, AUTH_TOKEN)
# if credentials are stored in the PLIVO_AUTH_ID and the PLIVO_AUTH_TOKEN environment variables
# then initialize client as:
# client = Phlo.new
begin
phlo = client.phlo.get('<phlo_id>')
#parameters set in PHLO - params
params = {
from: '<caller_id>',
to: '<destination_number>'
}
response = phlo.run(params)
puts response
rescue PlivoRESTError => e
puts 'Exception: ' + e.message
end
Replace the auth placeholders with your authentication credentials from the Plivo console. Replace the phlo_id placeholder with your PHLO ID from the Plivo console. Replace the phone number placeholders with actual phone numbers in E.164 format (for example, +12025551234).
Save the file and run it.
ruby trigger_phlo.rb
Here’s how to use Plivo APIs and XML to implement voice surveys.
Change to the project directory and run this command to create a Rails controller.
$ rails generate controller Plivo voice
This generates a controller named plivo_controller in the app/controllers/ directory and a respective view in app/views/plivo. We can delete the view as we will not need it.
$ rm app/views/plivo/voice.html.erb
Edit app/controllers/plivo_controller.rb and add this code in the PlivoController class.
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include Plivo
include Plivo::XML
include Plivo::Exceptions
class PlivoController < ApplicationController
# Message that Plivo reads when the call recipient answers
$question1 = "Hi, this is a call from Plivo. How would you rate your overall satisfaction with our services? Press 1 if you're satisfied or 2 to suggest improvements"
$question2 = "How would you rate your satisfaction with our customer service? Press 1 if you're satisfied or 2 to suggest improvements"
# Message that Plivo reads when the recipient provides negative feedback
$negative_feedback = "We're sorry about your bad experience. One of our representatives will get in touch with you"
# Message that Plivo reads when the caller does nothing
$noinput_message = "Sorry, I didn't catch that. Please hang up and try again"
# This is the message that Plivo reads when the caller inputs a wrong number.
$wronginput_message = "Sorry, that's not a valid entry"
def survey
r = Response.new()
getinput_action_url = "https://<yourdomain>.com/ivr/firstbranch/"
params = {
action: getinput_action_url,
method: 'POST',
digitEndTimeout: '5',
inputType:'dtmf',
redirect:'true'
}
getinput = r.addGetInput(params)
getinput.addSpeak($question1)
r.addSpeak($noinput_message)
xml = PlivoXML.new(r)
render xml: xml.to_xml
end
def firstbranch
digit = params[:Digits]
r = Response.new()
if (digit == "1")
getinput_action_url = "https://<yourdomain>.com/ivr/secondbranch/"
params = {
action: getinput_action_url,
method: 'POST',
digitEndTimeout: '5',
inputType:'dtmf',
redirect:'true'
}
getinput = r.addGetInput(params)
getinput.addSpeak($question2)
r.addSpeak($noinput_message)
elsif (digit == "2")
r.addSpeak($negative_feedback)
else
r.addSpeak($wronginput_message)
end
xml = PlivoXML.new(r)
render xml: xml.to_xml
end
def secondbranch
digit = params[:Digits]
r = Response.new()
if (digit == "1")
body = "Thank you for participating in the survey"
params = {
'language'=> "en-GB"
}
r.addSpeak(body,params)
elsif (digit == "2")
r.addSpeak($negative_feedback)
else
r.addSpeak($wronginput_message)
end
xml = PlivoXML.new(r)
render xml: xml.to_xml
end
end
Replace the auth placeholders with your authentication credentials from the Plivo console. Replace the phone number placeholders with actual phone numbers in E.164 format (for example, +12025551234).
Add a route for the inbound function in the PlivoController class. Edit config/routes.rb and add these lines after the inbound route.
get 'plivo/survey'
get 'plivo/firstbranch'
get 'plivo/secondbranch'
Start the Rails server.
$ rails server
You should see your basic server application in action at http://localhost:3000/plivo/survey/.
Set up ngrok to expose your local server to the internet.
Make a call to a Plivo phone number and see how the survey application works.