
We'd get exactly one subscriber, a 20 year old admin at one company. This wouldn't be a useful thing for our type of customer in general. Perhaps perspective is important, we generate maybe six such events/notifications per year. On Thu, Jun 1, 2017 at 2:30 PM, Matthew Crocker <matthew at corp.crocker.com> wrote:
Set up a status page, configure RSS and let your customers subscribe to the RSS feed. Their responsibility to maintain notifications and they will drop off when they are no longer interested.
Or, you could setup a couple twitter handles for notifications and have customers follow them. No need to maintain a notification list.
-Matt
--
Matthew Crocker
Crocker Communications, Inc.
President
*From: *VoiceOps <voiceops-bounces at voiceops.org> on behalf of Carlos Alvarez <caalvarez at gmail.com> *Date: *Thursday, June 1, 2017 at 4:40 PM *To: *"voiceops at voiceops.org" <voiceops at voiceops.org> *Subject: *Re: [VoiceOps] How do you update/manage your notification contacts?
Sending notifications is the easy part, lots of services for that. It's the maintenance of who the right contacts is which I find challenging. Since we see support tickets arrive from unexpected/new contacts, we know there must be people who need to know, but we don't know who they are.
On Thu, Jun 1, 2017 at 1:37 PM, Ryan Delgrosso <ryandelgrosso at gmail.com> wrote:
Weve recently starting testing a statuspage internally http://staytus.co/ and like it enough we will probably go live with it customer facing. this allows us to have pre-formatted emails for different event classifications, and the users opt in/out on their own. Its fairly extensible being written in ruby, and has an API to take machine-generated events.
Atlassian has their own as well if you want to pay atlassian money
https://www.atlassian.com/software/statuspage
On 5/31/2017 2:58 PM, Carlos Alvarez wrote:
We're at the point where we really need to clean up and update our notifications contact list (people to notify of outages, changes, etc). I'm curious what people here use. We use Freshdesk for our support tickets, and that was a good list to start with, but as employees change it wouldn't get updated necessarily.
Something we can simply pay for and outsource is ideal. We're an open source company, but time is a precious resource right now.
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