Clarity Rating Scale: Outage at AT&T
On the Hot Seat: According to CNBC, early Thursday, tens of thousands of AT&T customers across the U.S. reported widespread service outages and were unable to use their phones without access to WiFi. The outage raised concerns that AT&T had been hit with a potential cyberattack. The company said service was restored to all affected customers shortly after 3 p.m. ET.
How did AT&T handle crisis communications?
The Good:
This website was set up for updates. The information, although brief, is succinct and clear.
A timely statement was released on Thursday: “Keeping our customers connected remains our top priority, and we are taking steps to ensure our customers do not experience this again in the future.”
A coordinated release of information on X on the AT&T News account and reshared by the AT&T account to the channel’s 915k followers. The first post directs people to the webpage above with updates. Nice.
The Hmmm:
Three days later, yesterday, the CEO apologized in a letter to employees and AT&T apologized to customers, **I think**, by text.
I received the text above at 8:11 p.m. CT last night (interrupted Money Heist binge-watching)
Is it spam? Is it real?
Should AT&T text people after 8 p.m. on a Sunday night?
I argue it’s too brief. If you can send one text, send two with more details, like will I get a credit that is mentioned in the CEO’s message? Share the statement URL? Send people to the webpage with updates?
Writing brief messages is a challenge, but can I get a few more details on what “commit to doing better” means?
During the entire crisis from Thursday to this morning, there were a total of 4 posted messages on X. (See image below) Curious if that is enough?
For example, why wasn’t the CEO apology shared on X?
So, what happened? Was it a cyberattack?
Does this smell like legalese to you?
I can just hear the various departments debating how to write that sentence, and by the looks of it, the lawyers won.
Exercise: Read Stankey’s answer to one person and ask them what it means.
Overall Clarity Rating Score for AT&T outage response: 3
They certainly were on top of the crisis and communicating with media and customers.
Not sure why the apology took three days.
Still not sure why the outage happened, and the answer given makes me think there is more to the story.
The Clarity Rating Scale measures effective communications on a scale of 1 to 5 using this criteria:
1: Blurry, Indistinct
2: Slightly Focused, Needs Adjustment
3: Moderately Focused, Fair Clarity
4: Well-Focused, High Clarity
5: Razor-Sharp Focus, Crystal Clear (Are we clear?)