▲ | hnuser123456 5 days ago | |||||||
User files a ticket for their computer, then goes to lunch. IT fixes the problem and closes the ticket while user is at lunch with nothing but an email "we've resolved your ticket" and user discovers it is in fact solved. Some people will still be mildly upset because they didn't get to talk to the technician and give them a story or socialize, or they start calling the IT team "ghosts" | ||||||||
▲ | spencerflem 5 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
Hmmm, I'd argue that there's two separate problems here: 1. The desire to have a working computer, which was validated and solved 2. The desire to be connected to the process and the people they're working with, which was neither validated nor solved Validating but not solving the second would include some sort of message saying that you know they'd rather a call but it helps you serve more tickets this way, or something to that regard. | ||||||||
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▲ | macintux 5 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
I'm annoyed with that kind of response because I want to know what was broken, so I can keep an eye out for it in the future or be careful not to trigger the behavior. | ||||||||
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