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AlertOps

5 ways you can Empower Your Remote IT Team

The coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has transformed the global workforce — and your enterprise is no exception. Enterprises are increasingly allowing staff to work remotely during this difficult time. Yet, many enterprises are still learning how to use remote workforce technology to effectively engage workers in real-time. AlertOps can connect your teams, regardless of location. It several features to power your remote workforce.

Modern ITSM Solutions: Flexibility in Incident Response

We no longer live in a world where a few tools determine the way organizations structure their processes. From IT Service Delivery to Incident Response, Modern IT Operation Solutions need to embody the flexibility that most Enterprises require. The dynamic ITOps ecosystem has shifted to put choice back in the hands of the user. Now, IT Solutions must follow suit. Modern Incident Response platforms, in particular, need the flexibility that enterprises need to mirror their enterprise architecture.

COVID-19 Pandemic: How to Use AlertOps to Keep Your Enterprise Running

The coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has forced many global enterprises to temporarily shut down their operations, resulting in lost productivity and revenue losses. Yet, with a business continuity management (BCM) strategy, enterprises are well-equipped to limit business interruptions until the pandemic passes.

How No-Code Integrations Help Incident Management Scale

Do you think no-code is just another buzzword that with no real meaning? Well, maybe it is in some contexts. But if you want an example of how no-code solutions can matter in the real world, look no further than the context of incident management. Let us explain by walking through what no-code solutions mean in the context of incident management, how they work and how they can help teams scale and streamline their operations.

Best Practices for Managing Multiple On-Call Teams

Alerting has come a long way from the days of paging an on-call administrator in the middle of the night, to multiple on-call teams that run and manage incident response around the clock. This is because as organizations grow and scale, responding to incidents also gets more complex and you often need more than one team to get involved to successfully resolve an incident.

Assessing the Per-Minute Cost of an Outage for YOUR Company

Software vendors and analysts love to rattle off scary numbers about how many thousands of dollars per minute or hour an infrastructure outage will cost the typical company. Those numbers can be scary indeed; for example, Gartner quotes $5,400 per minute as the cost borne by a medium to large-sized retailer. Your company, however, is most likely not identical to the “typical” company on which the numbers are based.

One Size Does Not Fit All: Tailoring Incident Response Messages to Different Stakeholders

In a simpler world, incident response notifications would be a one-size-fits-all type of item. You could deliver the same notification to everyone with equally successful results. But in the real world, incident response messages must be nuanced. Unlike baseball hats or wristwatches, the messages you send to different stakeholders when an incident occurs need to be tailored to each category of recipient.