Burning off the good will points...
Dec. 17th, 2003 09:49 amSo, I seriously screwed up at work the other night,
and basically caused a severity 1 outage. If I did
not already have a phenomenal amount of goodwill
stored up with the customer solutions and
sales teams, I'd be discussing other contract
opportunities with Mindsource.
Luckily, I did have a phenomenal amount
of goodwill lying around, so I'm merely having to
do the penance of documenting everything that I
should have done differently, and everything we
need to change to prevent a similar failure in the
future. But its still icky.
and basically caused a severity 1 outage. If I did
not already have a phenomenal amount of goodwill
stored up with the customer solutions and
sales teams, I'd be discussing other contract
opportunities with Mindsource.
Luckily, I did have a phenomenal amount
of goodwill lying around, so I'm merely having to
do the penance of documenting everything that I
should have done differently, and everything we
need to change to prevent a similar failure in the
future. But its still icky.
no subject
Date: 2003-12-17 09:59 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-12-17 10:14 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-12-17 11:13 am (UTC)It happens. When you're working for a true 24x7x365 outfit, there will be screw-ups that cause service outages. Sometimes they'll be caused by you. The company's goal is to get the total service-outage time to zero seconds per year, every year—good luck. The reason that you've been getting brownie points is that the company must think you're working really hard to make the customers happy. That you caused an outage just now affects that perception not at all, though it may affect the company's perception of whether what you do is always right.
-(Cheers)
generalist
(no subject)
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