Posted By Rich Miller On July 9, 2009 @ 3:37 pm In Downtime | 12 Comments
[1]Hosting and colocation are highly competitive businesses. That competition gets heated whenever a prominent provider experiences an outage, as rival providers seek to poach customers who are unhappy their site is offline and searching for news about the outage.
For many years “rescue marketing” was commonly seen in Google keyword searches, as hosting companies would purchase text ads [2] tied to keywords, including trademarked brands of a provider experiencing an outage. Frustrated customers Googling for information would encounter hosting offers from competing firms.
In recent months the trend has shifted to Twitter, where rival hosts have begun pitching their services using hashtags, the topical phrases included in Tweets (such as #fisherfire) to aid topical searching. By adding an outage-related hashtag to an “adverTweet,” some providers have sought to market their services to customers affected by outages.
ServInt brings an interesting perspective to outage-related marketing in a blog post today [3], in which CEO Reed Caldwell discusses the recent outages at Rackspace and reflects on the post-downtime scramble for customer loyalty.Article printed from Data Center Knowledge: http://www.datacenterknowledge.com
URL to article: http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2009/07/09/hosting-downtime-and-competition/
URLs in this post:
[1] Image: http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/servers.jpg
[2] purchase text ads: http://news.netcraft.com/archives/2003/10/22/french_ruling_on_google_ads_has_implications_for_web_host_marketing.html
[3] blog post today: http://blog.servint.net/2009/07/08/why-servint-stands-beside-rackspace-and-you-should-too/
[4] Rich Miller: http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/author/richm/
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