Hello All,
Could anyone share the advantage between these 2 options?
Sending the Team A alert notification copy to Team B.
1) Routing Rules -> Escalation Policies
2) Add Policies -> Add the Responder.
Regards,
Sathish
Hello Satish,
Thank you for contacting the Opsgenie community. We understand you are looking for advantage between Escalation Policies and Adding Responder via policies.
Here's a comparison of the two options for sending a Team A alert notification copy to Team B in Opsgenie:
How it works: You configure a routing rule on Team A to send certain alerts to an escalation policy, which can include Team B as a step in the escalation.
Advantages:
Flexible Notification Flow: Escalation policies allow you to define the order, timing, and conditions for notifying different users or teams. For example, you can notify Team A first, and if unacknowledged after X minutes, escalate to Team B.
Granular Control: You can set up multiple steps, repeat notifications, and automatically close alerts after escalation cycles.
Visibility: When a team is added via escalation, all members gain visibility and are notified according to their own escalation policies and routing rules.
How it works: You add Team B as an additional responder to the alert, either via alert creation or by using an alert policy.
Advantages:
Immediate Visibility: Both Team A and Team B are added as responders at the same time, so both teams are notified in parallel according to their own notification rules.
Simplicity: This is a straightforward way to ensure both teams are aware of the alert without configuring escalation steps.
Use Case: Useful when both teams need to be notified simultaneously, rather than in a sequence.
Option |
Notification Flow |
Use Case |
---|---|---|
Routing Rules → Escalation Policies |
Sequential (A, then B if needed) |
When you want to escalate only if Team A doesn't respond |
Add Policies → Add the Responder |
Parallel (A and B at once) |
When both teams should be notified immediately |
I hope the above helps. Please feel free to reach out if you have any additional questions/queries, I'd be happy to help.
Regards,
Nayan
You must be a registered user to add a comment. If you've already registered, sign in. Otherwise, register and sign in.