I could see someone complaining about the idea of letting a third party carry outage info like that... at least in my environment. Really, it could be a blessing or a curse for your marketing team, but it does depend on how you handle it I suppose. Potential clients could use the information to see your ability to meet SLA targets before they sign on. If you're not the big dog in the arena, it can very easily work against you by enhancing the BS that competitors will provide. Or, of course, it can give them a warm fuzzy feeling knowing that they can readily see the issues and know how you've been affected. A lot of places still work with an MO of secrecy. The service I support is one of them. From a technical perspective, the idea is solid though. --WJM IV
------Original Message------ From: JoeSox To: nanog@nanog.org Subject: Re: OOB customer communications (Re: Looking for Support Contact at Equifax) Sent: Apr 26, 2009 8:08 PM
On Sun, Apr 26, 2009 at 7:40 PM, Mike Lewinski <mike@rockynet.com> wrote:
We're experimenting with Twitter as a means to communicate anytime there are system-wide outages (in addition to regular maintenance notifications). Adoption is slow but I foresee growth once we really get the word out.