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Building Reliability One Step At a Time

Webinar

Think About Your Audience Before Choosing a Webinar Title


Sponsored by gremlin


Thursday, April 8, 2021
11 a.m. ET
 
Building reliability in our organizations allows us to continue giving our customers a great user experience when they need it most. Many companies measure their reliability via nines of availability or system uptime percentage.
 
Site Reliability Engineering has taught us some of the practices we can adopt to reach our availability goals but we have to keep in mind that reaching your organization’s availability goals will be a learning experience and we have to be proactive about responding to failure.
 
In this talk, Ana will share how she has been using Chaos Engineering since 2016 to learn more about the systems she worked on and how this practice can be used to decouple our system’s weak points, learn from incidents and improve monitoring and observability.
 
Ana Margarita Medina
Senior Chaos Engineer - Gremlin

 

 

On-Demand Viewing:

What You’ll Learn in This Webinar

You’ve probably written a hundred abstracts in your day, but have you come up with a template that really seems to resonate? Go back through your past webinar inventory and see what events produced the most registrants. Sure – this will vary by topic but what got their attention initially was the description you wrote.

Paint a mental image of the benefits of attending your webinar. Often times this can be summarized in the title of your event. Your prospects may not even make it to the body of the message, so get your point across immediately.  Capture their attention, pique their interest, and push them towards the desired action (i.e. signing up for your event). You have to make them focus and you have to do it fast. Using an active voice and bullet points is great way to do this.

Always add key takeaways. Something like this....In this session, you’ll learn about:

  • You know you’ve cringed at misspellings and improper grammar before, so don’t get caught making the same mistake.
  • Get a second or even third set of eyes to review your work.
  • It reflects on your professionalism even if it has nothing to do with your event.