NOC ESCALATION

Escalate with evidence,
not anxiety.

When an alert fires, your operator has 30 seconds to decide whether to wake up a senior engineer. Argus tells them exactly what's affected, who's hit, and what happened last time. Before the call.

BLAST RADIUS MAP
THE ESCALATION CALL

Two operators. Same alert. One call gets made right.

Today, the escalation decision depends on who's at the desk. With Argus, it depends on the data.

TODAY

Operator escalates from gut feel.

1
Alert fires. PagerDuty buzzes. Operator sees the service name. No context.
02:17 AM
2
Operator opens the dashboard. Tries to remember what depends on this service.
+3 minutes
3
Pings the on-call channel. Asks if anyone knows whether this hits production.
+8 minutes
4
Decides to escalate. Wakes up the senior engineer just in case.
+12 minutes
Outcome: senior engineer woken up for a non-issue. Or worse, alert ignored and customers notice first.
WITH ARGUS

Operator escalates with evidence.

1
Alert fires. Operator asks Argus: "Is this hitting any P0 services?"
02:17 AM
2
Argus walks the topology. Surfaces the blast radius. Flags P0 impact.
+15 seconds
3
Argus shows what happened the last two times this signal appeared.
+30 seconds
4
Operator escalates with the briefing. Senior engineer starts with context.
+90 seconds
Outcome: right call, every time. Senior engineers stop being woken up for noise.
A REAL EXCHANGE

One question. One answer. The escalation call gets made.

It's 2:17 AM. A PagerDuty alert just fired. Your operator has 30 seconds to decide whether this is a real incident or a passing blip.

They ask Argus a single plain-language question. Argus does what a senior engineer would do, in the time it takes to type the next sentence.

It walks the service topology. It checks customer-facing dependencies. It compares the signal against the last 30 days of incidents on the same service. It hands back a structured answer with sources cited and the suggested next step.

Your operator escalates with evidence. Or stands down with evidence. Either way, the right call.

Argus · NOC Console · 02:17:42
noc-op> Is provisioning-flow alert hitting any P0 services?
SCANNING: service topology + dependencies
UPSTREAM: 0 services affected
DOWNSTREAM: Order Manager · Symphonica · Customer Portal (P0)
CUSTOMER IMPACT: YES · Customer Portal degraded since 02:14
PRIOR INCIDENTS: 0 in past 30 days on this service
ESCALATE NOW · Briefing ready in 88s
WHAT THIS MEANS FOR YOUR TEAM

One layer. Three quieter teams.

FOR NOC OPERATORS

Junior judgment, senior outcomes.

New operators stop guessing. Argus tells them what depends on this service, who's affected, and what happened last time. The escalation decision becomes a fact, not a feeling.

FOR SENIOR ENGINEERS

Stop being paged for noise.

The 2 AM phone call is reserved for real incidents. When the page comes, it comes with context, blast radius, and a hypothesis already attached.

FOR CUSTOMERS

Caught before they call.

Customer-facing impact is flagged at the alert, not after the support tickets pile up. The right team gets engaged before the SLA clock starts.

SEE IT ON ONE OF YOUR ALERTS

30 minutes. One real alert. You will know.

Bring a recent ambiguous alert from your environment. We bring the demo. You'll see exactly what Argus would surface, in the format your operator would receive.