There's also the deeper question: Why do we let the situation persist? Why do we tolerate the continued problems from unreachable companies? (And yes, this *is* an operational issue - what did that 4 hours on the
At the end of the day this is never going to stop. It's much easier
Earlier, Valdis scribbled: phone cost your company's bottom line in wasted time?) To a certain extent, it's simple economic logic. At the end of the day, I got my issue sorted and it cost me 4 hours of billable time. It cost the other party 15 minutes of time. Why employ another person full time to deal with queries or man an email desk, to save *me* 3h45min? It makes economic sense for bigger companies not to, well, "care". They aren't going to go away, you're not going to get in the way of the big Google/MS/BigCorp(tm) engine with gripes on your blog, so why bother spending more money on helping *you*? It might sound very black and white, but I can tell you now that a lot of these companies use that as a rationale even without thinking about it so directly. The whole situation is unfortunate. It seems that basic business ethics are going down the drain quicker and quicker. Maybe companies should start programming AliceBots to deal with technical/commonly asked queries via the LiveSupport button on their website. (hey, that sounds like a business idea!) It would be time better spent than phoning someone's automated answering box... imho Regards, Ivan -----Original Message----- From: owner-nanog@merit.edu [mailto:owner-nanog@merit.edu] On Behalf Of Valdis.Kletnieks@vt.edu Sent: 03 February 2006 15:33 To: Ivan Groenewald Cc: 'Gadi Evron'; 'n3td3v'; nanog@merit.edu Subject: Re: Yahoo, Google, Microsoft contact? On Fri, 03 Feb 2006 06:04:57 GMT, Ivan Groenewald said: posting
to Nanog than spending 4 hours on the phone trying to locate someone with a clue in one of these big companies.
All it would take is for http://puck.nether.net to carry either the correct contact info once it's been discovered, so it doesn't have to be rediscovered over and over, or a "Don't bother" entry(*) so people don't have to re-discover that there's no way to get there from here. There's also the deeper question: Why do we let the situation persist? Why do we tolerate the continued problems from unreachable companies? (And yes, this *is* an operational issue - what did that 4 hours on the phone cost your company's bottom line in wasted time?) (*) And yes, I'm *FULLY* aware of at least the top 17 reasons why That Just Won't Work, so don't bother posting a reply unless you've got a particularly interesting number 18 - the *point* is that *IF* the info was listed, it would help solve the problem of wasting time trying to reach these companies.