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Using Bot Framework Composer skill to add DTMF aggregation to Copilot Studio classic for voice support

Applies to: Dynamics 365 Customer Service

Important

Power Virtual Agents capabilities and features are now part of Microsoft Copilot Studio following significant investments in generative AI and enhanced integrations across Microsoft Copilot.

Some articles and screenshots may refer to Power Virtual Agents while we update documentation and training content.

With Copilot Studio, you can extend your bot with Microsoft Bot Framework skills. You'll need such Bot Framework skills to aggregate data for DTMF.

Note

For brevity, we refer to Microsoft.Bot.Components.Telephony as Telephony Extensions.

Note

This article refers to Copilot Studio classic for voice support. Use Copilot Studio to develop semi-pro-code solutions that leverage the Bot Framework Composer, and the Bot Framework Telephony Package. Find a guide to develop a skill by Bot Framework Composer and add the custom skill to your copilot at https://aka.ms/pvavoiceskills.

Learn more at Add skills, where you also find links that include the errors you may get when adding your skill to Copilot Studio classic bot.

The intent of this article is to provide a sample code of the custom skill that uses Aggregate DTMF Input (#) included in the Telephony Extensions sample.

Aggregate DTMF Input (#) prompts the user for multiple inputs that are aggregated until the Termination Character is received.

Screenshot of the Aggregate D T M F screen, showing the Aggregate event activity.

Sample code

Find the sample code at Bot Framework Skill. The ZIP file contains a sample Bot Framework Skill project.

Find another sample at Copilot Studio classic bot solution. This ZIP file contains the PowerApps solution that contains the Power Virtual Agents bot.

Important

Sample codes, components (solutions), and documents created by the community are not supported by Microsoft.

If you have questions or issues with community tools, contact the publisher of them.

Set up the environment

To work on the bot framework skill sample code, you need a set of things to be successful:

  • An Azure Account
  • The Bot Framework Composer (optional, but assumed for this document)
  • A Copilot Studio classic bot integrated with Omnichannel for Dynamics 365 Customer Service Omnichannel for voice channels

For a copilot that is integrated with a voice channel in Omnichannel for Customer Service, you can import the sample solution Copilot Studio classic bot solution in your Customer Service environment.

As soon as the solution is imported, you can open the Copilot Studio classic bot.

Screenshot of the Aggregate D T M F screen, which shows a list of objects for the Open Skill Project.

From the bot you need to take the Bot ID that will be used in the Skill publishing step.

Screenshot of the Add a Skill screen containing the Your bot I D and Skill manifest U R L fields.

Assuming you have the items listed in the requirements above, our basic flow is to open the sample project with Bot Framework Composer; author a basic skill; and then publish the skill to Azure.

First, open Composer and open the Skill Sample project.

Screenshot of the Select a Bot pane, showing a list of available bots, with Name, Date modified, and Edit columns.

After this, you'll be taken to the composer authoring canvas, which is similar to that in Power Virtual Agents. In this sample, the Telephony Package extension is used. From the left nav of the Composer UI, choose Package Manager, and from within that UI go to Installed tab.

Screenshot of the Package Manager screen, showing available options under the Installed tab.

Once you're familiar with the Bot Framework Composer, authoring the skill, publish the Skill, please flow the guide in the link posted at the beginning of Publishing to Azure including creating Azure resources.

Once the skill is published, a last step before leaving Azure. To further ensure security, Copilot Studio requires that a skill be in the same AAD Tenant as the Copilot Studio classic Bot. First go to the Azure portal in the browser at https://portal.azure.com. Sign in, and navigate to the App Registration section.

Screenshot of the Copilot Studio App Registration with the owned applications tab selected.

Within here, search for the app registration using the name for the skill. Once found, choose the Branding and Properties element in the left hand menu. From here, either the Home Page URL must match the domain of the skill or the Publisher Domain must match the AAD tenant of the Copilot Studio classic Bot. The latter is the more secure solution.

Screenshot of the Copilot Studio App Registration with the branding and properties tab being highlighted.

Skill in Copilot Studio

In the Copilot Studio Bot included in the solution the skill is already added, so you need to refresh that one.

Screenshot of the Skills tab, showing the aggregate D T M F option.

Inserting the Skill Manifest URL you got after the skill publishing.

Screenshot of the Update skill pane, showing the Your bot I D and Skill manifest U R L fields.

Test your skill

You're now ready to interact with the bot on the test canvas. Run the skill as a step just like any other dialog step in the bot.

Screenshot of the test bot in design mode with the decision flow chart.