SERVICE LEVEL AGREEMENTS (SLAs)

SLAs define how quickly the team acknowledges, responds to, and resolves client needs.
These rules eliminate ambiguity, prevent randomization, and set healthy boundaries.

Response vs. Resolution Times

Clients often confuse “we received your request” with “we’re actively solving it.”

Your team will now define BOTH separately.

Response Time

When the client receives acknowledgement and clarity on next steps.

Resolution Time

When the task is actually completed, delivered, or scheduled.

Both are documented in the PM tool and sent to the client.


Priority Matrix (P1–P4)

P1 — Critical (Immediate)

Examples:

  • Site down
  • Payment/checkout broken
  • Fatal error preventing use
  • Security or data risk

Response: 30 minutes
Resolution: As soon as possible; pause all other work
Escalation: Immediately to PM + Project Lead + Leadership


P2 — High Priority

Examples:

  • Important function broken
  • Time-sensitive requests
  • Live campaign issues

Response: Same business day
Resolution: 1–3 business days
Escalation: PM decides if leadership input is needed


P3 — Standard Work

Examples:

  • Content updates
  • Small enhancements
  • Minor bugs
  • Design or copy adjustments

Response: 24 business hours
Resolution: 3–7 business days


P4 — Low Priority / Backlog

Examples:

  • “Nice to have” features
  • Low-impact design changes
  • Research or ideas
  • Backlog items

Response: 48 hours
Resolution: Added to future roadmap or sprint


Active vs. Inactive Clients

To prevent unnecessary context-switching:

Active Projects / Active Retainers

  • Use full SLA rules (P1–P4)
  • PM prioritizes based on impact
  • Weekly updates provided

Inactive or Past Clients

  • Response within 24 hours
  • Resolution scheduled within 5 business days
  • If request requires a scope update → formal proposal needed

Escalation Path

When a request does not fit cleanly into SLAs, the escalation path is:

  1. Team Member → PM (Primary decision-maker)
  2. PM → Project Lead (if technical complexity involved)
  3. PM/Lead → Leadership (budget, scope, contract concerns)

Escalation is not failure. It is risk management.


Documentation Requirements

Every client request must include:

  • Summary of the issue
  • Priority level
  • Screenshots or links
  • PM triage notes
  • Assigned owner
  • Estimated resolution time

If undocumented → request is not in progress.

Updated on November 12, 2025
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