You don’t build fire exits during a fire.
So why do so many teams wait until after their first big outage to build a status page?
Spoiler: by the time your users are angry, your Slack is exploding, and support is drowning in tickets… it’s already too late.
Here’s why you should set up a status page before you need it — and how to do it in under 10 minutes 👇
🧠 Outages Are Inevitable — Panic Doesn’t Have to Be
Your app will go down someday.
That’s just reality.
What matters is how you respond — and how you keep your users informed.
A status page helps you:
- Communicate issues in real time
- Build trust even during bad moments
- Reduce support volume
- Show you're serious about transparency
❌ The “Oh Crap” Scenario (You Don’t Want)
You ship fast, monitoring’s minimal, life’s good.
Then boom — DNS issue, your API is unreachable.
What happens?
- You scramble to investigate
- Customers start tweeting
- Your support team panics
- And you realize... “We should’ve had a status page.”
But now you’re building one under pressure, during chaos.
Which means… you probably won’t do it right.
✅ The Proactive Move (You Definitely Want)
Set up your status page now — while things are calm.
With tools like Garmingo Status, it literally takes under 10 minutes to go live.
- Link your monitors
- Add your logo & branding
- Publish to your custom domain (e.g.
status.yourapp.com
) - Optional: Add incident templates, alert routing, scheduled maintenance
You're now prepared.
And your future self will thank you.
💡 Bonus: It’s Not Just for Outages
You can also use your status page for:
- ✅ Release updates
- 🧪 Maintenance announcements
- 🔐 Security incident transparency
- 📊 SLA history & uptime metrics
- 🧘 Internal monitoring (private mode)
🎁 Want to Set One Up Right Now?
With Garmingo Status, you get:
- 🧠 Multiple monitor types
- 🎨 Fully customizable status pages
- 🔔 Smart alerts via Email, Slack, Telegram, Discord & more
- 📄 Monthly PDF reports, SLA targets
- 🆓 A forever free plan — no credit card needed
👉 Start your free status page now
🧘♂️ TL;DR
By the time you realize you need a status page — it’s already too late.
Set it up now.
Keep your users in the loop.
And turn downtime into a moment of trust — not chaos.