Omnilert Enhances Emergency Alert Offerings with SMS Inbox

Omnilert has released an SMS Inbox feature for its e2campus and Amerilert emergency alert systems. The new tool is a cloud-based emergency dialog management feature that organizes incoming responses to emergency alerts in a way intended to help administrators gain better situational awareness to manage an incident.

SMS Inbox will allow students, citizens, first responders, employees, and others using Omnilert emergency alert products to reply to text messages alerts and engage in an ongoing dialogue with emergency response administrators to provide information that may affect the response to an emergency, or make requests for assistance during an emergency, via native text messages.

The feature also allows system administrators to respond to individual recipients via SMS text messages from the SMS Inbox interface and is available to all e2Campus and Amerilert accounts at no additional cost.

The need for this new feature, according to a company release, stems from Omnilert's stated belief that during major incidents communication systems can become overwhelmed and text messaging often proves to be the most effective way, and sometimes the only way, to communicate.

"This is a fantastic addition to e2Campus, and one I can see lots of benefit to," said Gerald Volpe, operations manager for student development at Colby-Sawyer College, in an Omnilert release. "It gives us a way to make it more interactive and gather information when we're using the system for an emergency."

The SMS Inbox feature is now live for all e2Campus and Amerilert clients that currently have the SMS Reply feature active. If clients do not currently have SMS Reply active, or would like to activate SMS Inbox, they may contact their account manager about adding this feature at no cost.

Omnilert is a privately held company headquartered in Leesburg, VA. The company's 9,000 clients include Penn State and Cal Poly. Omnilert solutions are sold under the brand names e2Campus, Amerilert, and RainedOut.

For more information, visit omnilert.com.

About the Author

Kevin Hudson is a freelance journalist based in Portland, Oregon. He can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • stylized figures, resumes, a graduation cap, and a laptop interconnected with geometric shapes

    OpenAI to Launch AI-Powered Jobs Platform

    OpenAI announced it will launch an AI-powered hiring platform by mid-2026, directly competing with LinkedIn and Indeed in the professional networking and recruitment space. The company announced the initiative alongside an expanded certification program designed to verify AI skills for job seekers.

  • magnifying glass highlighting the letters “AI” within lines of text

    New Turnitin Detection Feature Helps Identify Use of AI Humanizer Tools

    Academic integrity solution provider Turnitin has expanded its AI writing detection capabilities with AI bypasser detection, a feature designed to help identify text that has been modified by AI humanizer tools.

  • abstract pattern of shapes, arrows and circuit lines

    Internet2 Announces a New President and CEO to Step Up in October

    Internet2, the member-driven nonprofit offering advanced network technology services and cyberinfrastructure to the research and education community has completed its search, which began this past May, for a new president and CEO to take the helm.

  • school building connected by lines to symbols of AI, data charts, and a funding document with a dollar sign

    ED Issues Guidance on the Use of Federal Grant Funds to Support Learner Outcomes with AI

    In response to President Trump's April 23 Executive Order on advancing AI education, the United States Department of Education has issued new guidance on how K-12 and higher education institutions may use federal grant funds "to support improved outcomes for learners through the responsible integration of artificial intelligence."