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 <[email protected]> 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 <[email protected]> on behalf of Carlos > Alvarez <[email protected]> > *Date: *Thursday, June 1, 2017 at 4:40 PM > *To: *"[email protected]" <[email protected]> > *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 <[email protected]> > 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. > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > VoiceOps mailing list > > [email protected] > > https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/voiceops > > > > > _______________________________________________ > VoiceOps mailing list > [email protected] > https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/voiceops > > >
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