This week's customer-induced pet hate
When you work for an ISP as I did for five and a half fun-filled years you hear everything. You experience the full gamut of people with so little idea of what they're doing that you marvel that they appeared to have got out of bed on the correct side without braining themselves on the wall; the kind for whom walking and chewing gum simultaneously would appear to present an insurmountable challenge. I once spent 40 minutes trying to get to the bottom of why a customer couldn't see the BBC Education site when I got to the site virtually instantly, even though he was connected to the same network and using the same browser. Eventually I figured out that he had no idea what the address bar in his browser was for, that his only method of reaching any website was to type its URL into the search box which appeared on AOL UK's home page and which was set as his browser default and that because that day AOL couldn't see the site in question, neither could he. Shortly before I joined the company, my so-to-be cow-orker Debi had the following exchange with a certain well-known TV fitness instructor who happened to be a customer of ours:
Debi: "Good morning, I-Way support. How can I help you?"
Mr Motivator*: "I can't get my e-mail."
[twenty-five minutes of increasingly low-level troubleshooting]
Debi: "On the front of your modem, which lights are on?"
Mr Motivator: "None."
Debi: "None?"
Mr Motivator: "None."
Debi: "Is it switched on?"
Mr Motivator: "No. Why? Does it have to be?"
* Yes, that Mr Motivator, the dude in the green lycra suit and baseball cap from TV-AM.
But I digress. The company I now work for doesn't deal with home users and the vast majority of our customers are smart cookies who have very definitely been in the same room as a clue. So I don't have these problems anymore, especially as I deal with the enterprise customers. But still, you get the occasional one where you wonder why they called up in the first place.
Yesterday I took a case where a new customer had called for a piece of fairly basic configuration advice. I called him back, expecting to explain what he needed to do and have the call finished in two minutes, if that. I put the phone down after the fifteen most frustrating minutes of this year. At no point was I permitted to tell the guy anything without being interrupted after six or seven words for him to tell me something neither of interest nor relevance. It took me at least three attempts to say anything. By the time he'd stopped me for the fourth time from answering an additional question he'd just asked I was about three seconds from a career-limiting recommendation that we would make rather more progress if he would please just shut. The. Fuck. Up and let me give him the information he had requested. Honestly, what's with these people?





<< Home