limuel.saura — Coaching Report
Week of 2026-05-25 – 2026-05-31
At a Glance
| Calls Handled | Avg Handle Time | Top Product | Top Problem | Cases Documented | Cases Escalated |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 39 | 23m 53s | MX6200 | SETUP | 34 | 4 |
Scorecard
| Dimension | This Week | Calls Reviewed |
|---|---|---|
| Accuracy | 1.74 | 39 |
| Protocol | 1.74 | 39 |
| Communication | 2.05 | 39 |
| Overall | 2.21 | 39 |
Scores reflect the 39 calls reviewed this week. Overall scores range from 1.0 to 4.0.
This Week's Coverage
Models Supported
| Model | Calls | Avg Score |
|---|---|---|
| MX6200 | 7 | 3.23 |
| MX2000 | 5 | 2.56 |
| SPNM60CF | 3 | 2.37 |
| WHW03 | 2 | 2.40 |
| EA8100 | 2 | 2.40 |
Note: Lower scores on MX2000 and SPNM60CF calls suggest opportunities to deepen familiarity with these models’ setup flows and troubleshooting paths.
Problem Categories
| Category | Calls | Avg Score | Focus Area? |
|---|---|---|---|
| SETUP | 15 | 2.07 | ✓ |
| CONNECTIVITY | 13 | 2.38 | ✓ |
| ACCESS | 6 | 2.73 | |
| CONFIGURATION | 4 | 2.95 |
SETUP and CONNECTIVITY categories show the lowest average scores and highest volumes, indicating these areas merit focused attention. Common patterns include incomplete troubleshooting steps, misapplied reset procedures, and insufficient verification of fixes.
What Went Well
Strength: Accurate Mesh Node Pairing Guidance
“Okay, so we’re going to press the reset button five times within five seconds on the parent node, and then we’ll add the child node as a wired backhaul.”
This call demonstrates precise execution of the 5-press pairing method for MX2000 mesh recovery, resulting in solid-white LEDs and restored connectivity. The agent correctly identified the model, followed KB steps, and confirmed successful pairing.
Strength: Effective Use of Local Admin Access
“Let’s access the router locally via http://myrouter.local to reconfigure the Wi‑Fi settings.”
By guiding the customer to use the local admin URL instead of relying on cloud access, the agent bypassed internet dependency and enabled direct configuration changes. This approach aligns with best practices for mesh troubleshooting.
Strength: Clear Communication of Escalation Paths
“I’ve created ticket #130749 and will ensure Level‑2 reviews this within 2–3 hours. I’ll follow up with you shortly.”
The agent set clear expectations for escalation, provided a concrete ticket number, and committed to follow‑up—essential for maintaining customer trust when handing off to specialists.
Growth Opportunities
Opportunity: Reduce Accuracy Gaps in Technical Guidance
Current Gap:
Multiple calls contained incorrect technical instructions, such as wrong URLs, invalid reset procedures, and misapplied default credentials. These errors created confusion and delayed resolution.
What Good Looks Like:
- Verify all URLs (e.g.,
support.linksys.com,extender.linksys.com,myrouter.local) against the KB before sharing them. - Confirm default passwords match the device label or KB specifications (e.g., MR20MS uses the label-printed password, not “admin”).
- Use model‑specific reset instructions: 10‑second hold for SPNM series, 5‑press for Cognitive Mesh, etc.
Next Step:
“Before sharing any URL or credential, double-check it against the official KB article for the exact model. If unsure, pull up the article live during the call.”
#LTS00130782 #TE00130897 #LTS00130965
Opportunity: Strengthen Verification Before Closing Calls
Current Gap:
Several calls ended without confirming the fix (e.g., no verification of internet connectivity, no SSID visibility check, no post-reset LED confirmation). This risks leaving customers unresolved.
What Good Looks Like:
- After any configuration change, ask the customer to confirm connectivity (e.g., “Can you load a website now?” or “Is the Wi‑Fi network visible on your device?”).
- Verify LED states match expected values (e.g., solid white for healthy MX nodes, solid green for EA series internet).
- Document the final state in the case notes and confirm with the customer before closing.
Next Step:
“Before we end, let’s quickly verify that the internet is working and the LEDs are in the correct state. Can you check that for me?”
Next Week's Focus
- Model-Specific Checklist:
Create a quick reference sheet for MX2000, SPNM60CF, and WHW03 with model-specific URLs, default credentials, and reset steps. Review it before each call.
- Verification Script:
Develop a 3‑step verification script (LED check → connectivity test → SSID visibility) to run at the end of every call. Practice it until it becomes second nature.
- Escalation Readiness:
Before escalating, ensure all standard troubleshooting steps from the KB have been attempted. Document each step taken and its outcome in the case notes.
- URL Accuracy Drill:
Spend 10 minutes each morning reviewing the latest KB articles for URLs and credentials. Quiz yourself on common mistakes (e.g., support.linksys.com vs. support.linksys.com).
Technical Accuracy
Improvement
Incorrect support URL provided: 'support.linkssys.com' instead of 'support.linksys.com' - KB violation and potential security risk
Improvement
Incorrect default admin password 'admin' provided for MR20MS; KB states default is label-printed
Improvement
Invalid 5-press reset instructed for MR20MS (unsupported on this model); only valid for Cognitive Mesh models
Improvement
Incorrectly claimed Smart Wi-Fi account service is discontinued - contradicts KB guidance
Improvement
Wrong URL 'extender.linksis.com' (misspelled) provided; correct is extender.linksys.com
Coaching Moments
Improvement
“Okay, so right now, if it's still blinking, uh, yes. Uh-huh. Okay. How do I do that?”
The agent provided an incorrect support URL (support.linkssys.com) and failed to guide the customer through basic troubleshooting for an iPhone showing “No Internet” on EA-8100 Wi‑Fi. This created confusion and left the customer without a clear path forward.
Improvement
“Did we subway by the Verizon, by any chance? Or you don't really remember it? Airbob.”
The agent struggled with basic call control, asking repetitive questions and failing to collect essential information (ISP, modem status). This led to an inefficient call flow and incomplete troubleshooting.
Improvement
“I think my email provider is [link one] 02437 dash 5 GHz Z. That's, that's who I log in with.”
The agent accepted incomplete and unclear customer statements without clarification, risking misinterpretation of critical details like email addresses and Wi‑Fi passwords.
Escalation Lessons: What L2 Did
#TE00130749 — Pending with Level 2
What L1 saw:
- Customer needed to change the email on his Linksys cloud account but no longer had access to the original email.
- L1 incorrectly advised that the account must be deleted and recreated, contradicting KB guidance.
- L1 failed to attempt standard account recovery steps (password reset, recovery key verification) or verify ownership.
Why it escalated:
- The case was escalated because L1 provided materially incorrect technical guidance and failed to follow KB-guided account recovery procedures.
What L2 did:
- L2 initiated a callback process and began coordinating with HQ to facilitate the email change or provide proper recovery steps per KB (
universal_password_login.md). - L2 is awaiting customer availability for a callback to verify ownership and proceed with the account update.
Current state:
- Ticket remains Pending - HQ Feedback. L2 is coordinating internal resources to resolve the account email change without requiring account deletion.
L1 learning points:
- Account Recovery First: Always attempt password reset or recovery key verification before suggesting account deletion.
- Verify Ownership: Confirm the customer is the original owner and collect necessary verification details (e.g., purchase receipt, account creation date).
- Use KB Guidance: Follow the
universal_password_login.mdKB article for account recovery steps; account deletion is a last resort.
#TE00130897 — Resolved
What L1 saw:
- Customer’s MR20MS router would not connect to modem; showed solid magenta/purple LED, “Connected without internet,” and inaccessible admin page.
- L1 provided incorrect default admin password (“admin”) and an invalid 5-press reset procedure for MR20MS.
- Multiple failed troubleshooting attempts led to escalation.
Why it escalated:
- L1’s incorrect technical guidance and failure to verify modem/WAN connectivity caused unresolved issues, prompting escalation.
What L2 did:
- L2 verified WAN/modem status, corrected the admin password to the label-printed default, and guided the customer through proper reset and setup steps.
- L2 confirmed internet connectivity and accessed the admin page successfully.
Current state:
- Ticket marked Resolved. L2 confirmed the router now shows a solid green LED and internet connectivity.
L1 learning points:
- Verify WAN First: Always check modem/WAN status before troubleshooting the router.
- Use Correct Defaults: MR20MS uses the label-printed password, not “admin.”
- Model-Specific Resets: The 5-press reset is only valid for Cognitive Mesh models (e.g., MX6200, MBE7000), not MR20MS.
#TE00131076 — Resolved
What L1 saw:
- Customer was locked out of the Linksys mobile app after multiple failed password reset attempts; unable to access router remotely.
- L1 incorrectly claimed the web UI (
myrouter.local) cannot be accessed off-network and advised a 24-hour wait without offering recovery steps.
Why it escalated:
- L1 provided factually incorrect information about local access and failed to guide the customer through proper password recovery.
What L2 did:
- L2 clarified that
myrouter.localis accessible locally and guided the customer through the “Forgot Password” flow for the Linksys cloud account. - L2 also suggested reinstalling or updating the Linksys app, a common fix for login issues.
Current state:
- Ticket marked Resolved. Customer regained access to the cloud account and remote app functionality.
L1 learning points:
- Local Access is Valid: Always confirm local access via
myrouter.localor[REDACTED_PHONE]before suggesting cloud account recovery. - Offer Standard Recovery: Guide customers through the “Forgot Password” link, app reinstall, or email verification for cloud account lockouts.
- Provide Self-Help: Offer KB articles or email with instructions for self-service when possible.
#TE00131415 — Resolved
What L1 saw:
- Customer’s RE6350 extender showed no internet on a laptop while other devices worked; L1 escalated after failed troubleshooting.
- L1 provided incorrect guidance (e.g., contacting ISP without verifying router connectivity).
Why it escalated:
- L1 failed to verify router internet connectivity and provided incomplete troubleshooting steps.
What L2 did:
- L2 verified router internet connectivity, guided the customer through extender setup via
extender.linksys.com, and confirmed successful connection. - L2 advised the customer to contact CenturyLink/ISP only after confirming the router had internet.
Current state:
- Ticket marked Resolved. Extender now shows solid green LED and provides internet to the laptop.
L1 learning points:
- Verify Router Connectivity First: Always confirm the primary router has internet before troubleshooting extenders.
- Use Correct URLs: Provide
extender.linksys.com, not misspelled variants. - Guide Through Setup: Walk customers through extender setup steps, including SSID selection and password entry, before suggesting ISP contact.
Coach Appendix
This week’s highest-signal trend is inconsistent technical accuracy, particularly around URLs, default credentials, and model-specific procedures. The recurring pattern of providing incorrect support URLs (e.g., support.linkssys.com, extender.linksis.com) and misapplying reset methods (e.g., 5-press on non-Cognitive Mesh models) created confusion and required escalation.
Key takeaway:
- Verify every URL and credential against the KB before sharing it with the customer.
- Use model-specific reset instructions: 10‑second hold for SPNM series, 5‑press for Cognitive Mesh, etc.
- Confirm internet connectivity on the primary device before troubleshooting downstream components (e.g., extenders, TVs).
These adjustments will reduce escalations and improve first-contact resolution rates.