/customer-escalation
If you see unfamiliar placeholders or need to check which tools are connected, see CONNECTORS.md.
If you see unfamiliar placeholders or need to check which tools are connected, see CONNECTORS.md.
--- name: customer-escalation description: Package an escalation for engineering, product, or leadership with full context. Use when a bug needs engineering attention beyond normal support, multiple customers report the same issue, a customer is threatening to churn, or an issue has sat unresolved past its SLA. argument-hint: "<issue summary> [customer name]" ---
If you see unfamiliar placeholders or need to check which tools are connected, see [CONNECTORS.md](../../CONNECTORS.md).
Package a support issue into a structured escalation brief for engineering, product, or leadership. Gathers context, structures reproduction steps, assesses business impact, and identifies the right escalation target.
/customer-escalation <issue description> [customer name or account]Examples:
Parse the input and determine:
Use the "When to Escalate vs. Handle in Support" criteria below to confirm this warrants escalation.
Pull together relevant information from available sources:
Using the impact dimensions below, quantify:
Using the escalation tiers below, identify the right target: L2 Support, Engineering, Product, Security, or Leadership.
If the issue is a bug, follow the reproduction step best practices below to document clear repro steps with environment details and evidence.
## ESCALATION: [One-line summary]
**Severity:** [Critical / High / Medium]
**Target team:** [Engineering / Product / Security / Leadership]
**Reported by:** [Your name/team]
**Date:** [Today's date]
### Impact
- **Customers affected:** [Who and how many]
- **Workflow impact:** [What they can't do]
- **Revenue at risk:** [If applicable]
- **Time in queue:** [How long this has been an issue]
### Issue Description
[Clear, concise description of the problem — 3-5 sentences]
### What's Been Tried
1. [Troubleshooting step and result]
2. [Troubleshooting step and result]
3. [Troubleshooting step and result]
### Reproduction Steps
[If applicable — follow the format below]
1. [Step]
2. [Step]
3. [Step]
Expected: [X]
Actual: [Y]
Environment: [Details]
### Customer Communication
- **Last update to customer:** [Date and what was communicated]
- **Customer expectation:** [What they're expecting and by when]
- **Escalation risk:** [Will they escalate further if not resolved by X?]
### What's Needed
- [Specific ask — "investigate root cause", "prioritize fix",
"make product decision on X", "approve exception for Y"]
- **Deadline:** [When this needs resolution or an update]
### Supporting Context
- [Related tickets or links]
- [Internal discussion threads]
- [Documentation or logs]After generating the escalation:
---
**From:** Frontline support **To:** Senior support / technical support specialists **When:** Issue requires deeper investigation, specialized product knowledge, or advanced troubleshooting **What to include:** Ticket summary, steps already tried, customer context
**From:** Senior support **To:** Engineering team (relevant product area) **When:** Confirmed bug, infrastructure issue, needs code change, requires system-level investigation **What to include:** Full reproduction steps, environment details, logs or error messages, business impact, customer timeline
**From:** Senior support **To:** Product management **When:** Feature gap causing customer pain, design decision needed, workflow doesn't match customer expectations, competing customer needs require prioritization **What to include:** Customer use case, business impact, frequency of request, competitive pressure (if known)
**From:** Any support tier **To:** Security team **When:** Potential data exposure, unauthorized access, vulnerability report, compliance concern **What to include:** What was observed, who/what is potentially affected, immediate containment steps taken, urgency assessment **Note:** Security escalations bypass normal tier progression — escalate immediately regardless of your level
**From:** Any tier (usually L2 or manager) **To:** Support leadership, executive team **When:** High-revenue customer threatening churn, SLA breach on critical account, cross-functional decision needed, exception to policy required, PR or legal risk **What to include:** Full business context, revenue at risk, what's been tried, specific decision or action needed, deadline
When escalating, quantify impact where possible:
| Dimension | Questions to Answer | |-----------|-------------------| | **Breadth** | How many customers/users are affected? Is it growing? | | **Depth** | How severely are they impacted? Blocked vs. inconvenienced? | | **Duration** | How long has this been going on? How long until it's critical? | | **Revenue** | What's the ARR at risk? Are there pending deals affected? | | **Reputation** | Could this become public? Is it a reference customer? | | **Contractual** | Are SLAs being breached? Are there contractual obligations? |
Good reproduction steps are the single most valuable thing in a bug escalation. Follow these practices:
Don't escalate and forget. Maintain ownership of the customer relationship.
| Severity | Internal Follow-up | Customer Update | |----------|-------------------|-----------------| | **Critical** | Every 2 hours | Every 2-4 hours (or per SLA) | | **High** | Every 4 hours | Every 4-8 hours | | **Medium** | Daily | Every 1-2 business days |
Not every escalation stays escalated. De-escalate when:
When de-escalating: