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34 Years of the Digest ... founded August 21, 1981 |
Copyright © 2016 E. William Horne. All Rights Reserved. |
The Telecom Digest for Thu, 18 Feb 2016
Volume 35 : Issue 32 : "text" format
Table of contents |
Re: Comcast outages anger thousands across US | Barry Margolin |
Re: Comcast outages anger thousands across US | Doug McIntyre |
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Message-ID: <barmar-C17D47.10502617022016@88-209-239-213.giganet.hu>
Date: Wed, 17 Feb 2016 10:50:26 -0500
From: Barry Margolin <barmar@alum.mit.edu>
Subject: Re: Comcast outages anger thousands across US
In article <na06m9$veb$1@dont-email.me>,
David Clayton <dc33box-cdt@yahoo.com.au> wrote:
> On Mon, 15 Feb 2016 22:22:16 -0500, Bill Horne wrote:
>
> > by Jackie Wattles
> >
> > Comcast service outages sent social media ablaze with complaints from
> > areas all across the country.
> >
> > The TV and Internet provider's customer service account, @comcastcares,
> > was responding to an onslaught of unhappy customers on Monday.
> >
> > "[G]et more employees and offer same day help when there's a problem.
> > It's 2016, we aren't sending snail mail for help," one Twitter user
> > wrote.
> >
> > http://money.cnn.com/2016/02/15/news/companies/comcast-service-outage/
> index.html
>
> Do people actually realise that companies will not ever have heaps of
> people sitting around 99.9% of the time just in case there is a rare
> major outage simply to pander to their need for "support" (which usually
> means just telling them that the problem is being worked on)?
It doesn't take heaps of people -- a recorded message on the customer
support line saying that there's a known outage and it's being worked on
would work fine.
I know I've gotten that in the past when I've called Comcast when my
Internet went out.
--
Barry Margolin, barmar@alum.mit.edu
Arlington, MA
*** PLEASE post questions in newsgroups, not directly to me ***
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Message-ID: <bqednRy6IJbFlVnLnZ2dnUU7-bednZ2d@giganews.com>
Date: Tue, 16 Feb 2016 23:42:48 -0600
From: Doug McIntyre <merlyn@dork.geeks.org>
Subject: Re: Comcast outages anger thousands across US
David Clayton <dc33box-cdt@yahoo.com.au> writes:
>On Mon, 15 Feb 2016 22:22:16 -0500, Bill Horne wrote:
>> by Jackie Wattles
>>
>> Comcast service outages sent social media ablaze with complaints from
>> areas all across the country.
>>
>> The TV and Internet provider's customer service account, @comcastcares,
>> was responding to an onslaught of unhappy customers on Monday.
>>
>> "[G]et more employees and offer same day help when there's a problem.
>> It's 2016, we aren't sending snail mail for help," one Twitter user
>> wrote.
>>
>> http://money.cnn.com/2016/02/15/news/companies/comcast-service-outage/
>index.html
>Do people actually realise that companies will not ever have heaps of
>people sitting around 99.9% of the time just in case there is a rare
>major outage simply to pander to their need for "support" (which usually
>means just telling them that the problem is being worked on)?
They could easily contract out for reserve call-center workers to be
enabled and brought online for a major outage, if anything just to
admit there are major issues, and take a message to pass along.
There are call-centers who hotel for many different companies already
that could absorb some of the load. But this takes planning,
contracts, and still paying for some sort of outsourcing service.
--
Doug McIntyre
doug@themcintyres.us
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End of telecom Digest Thu, 18 Feb 2016