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by pauldd7
1624 days ago
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They only have people like Greg reaching out to you when your problem is posted on HN. They would have continued to ignore you had you not had the same reaction on HN. They've screwed up big time with us in the past and Greg wasn't reaching out. |
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Mostly I can forget they exist and do other things with my business. But my use case is very vanilla: no outbound automated marketing, its used by only a few people at my specific company, we're not even a tech company -just blue collar stuff.
This year has been different though. I had to verify that I had a real business so that my number didn't get blocked on certain carriers, submitting the paperwork in the right way turned out to be kind of difficult, however I don't think this was something they had control over if I understand the situation correctly. One of the carriers blocked us anyway (They were blocking text messages with links to job info that I was sending to my employees). I used the ticketing system to get that problem fixed and they resolved it in a few days - I was under the impression it was kind of a complex problem too.
They also help us port numbers in from cell phones sometimes. And again the ticketing system is slow but they always get the problems resolved. None of these things being time sensitive, we were perfectly happy.
This type of thing is a difficult business problem for small and mid size businesses to solve. In this particular situation, I had a series of actions I was going to take to put out this particular fire. Normally I wouldn't do something like this, but my back was to the wall: * Call their sales number so I could plead my case to a real person within the company and have them put me in contact with someone * If that person refused - Call again and try with another sales person (This approach did not work because no one was answering the phone for sales, perhaps due to covid omicron?) * Post on HackerNews to see if I could get the attention of one of the brand ambassadors. (This worked, so I did not have to move on to the next steps) * Post on StackOverflow to see if I could get the attention of one of the brand ambassadors * Post on Reddit to see if I could get the attention of one of the brand ambassadors * Use LinkedIn to track down people who worked at Twilio. Use a paid service to get their phone numbers and addresses from their names. Call some of the people. * If no one answered the phone, go by the houses of Twilio employees who lived in my area
Long term, I wasn't sure what I would do because getting all the code switched to another provider would have been a huge hassle and it would have seriously gotten in the way of some of my other business development efforts. So I'm glad that Greg and Jeff reached out and reassured me that they don't intend to run their business this way.
A more difficult problem is Google and Facebook. I have had valuable pages stolen from me on both platforms (ex-employee) And neither company would engage with me. We're talking maybe $100,000 in lost property because of the amount of business the pages would bring in. Someone mentioned in another post on here that people are actually able to use HackerNews to get Google's attention. If I had known this I would have tried that. I knew Twilio might respond because they very often would help me when I posted technical questions on Stackoverflow in the past. I didn't think google and facebook cared as much about their brand because they have a monopoly.