adobe photoshop plug in filters Cheap Software Downloads for Mac & Win consumer reports on adobe flash adobe photoshop cs keygen serial Adobe Premiere Pro CS4 MAC adobe photoshop 8.0 cs trial crack downloading adobe photoshop cs2 Adobe Acrobat 9 Pro Extended adobe photoshop elements 3.0 for windows record adobe flash videos free Adobe After Effects CS4 MAC disable adobe flash player 2 adobe premiere pro review Adobe After Effects CS4 creating cartoons with adobe illustrator adobe photoshop cs2 9.0.2 crack Adobe Creative Suite 4 Design Standard adobe photoshop 7 0 adobe indesign macromedia microsoft training training Adobe Creative Suite 4 Master Collection for Mac adobe photoshop 4 0 updates adobe photoshop cs3 extended april install Adobe Creative Suite 4 Master Collection adobe photoshop elements 4.0 reviews adobe photoshop elements version 2.0 updates Adobe Creative Suite 4 Web Premium adobe flash player coponets adobe photoshop al v2.0 Adobe Creative Suite 4 Web Standard arc radius in adobe illustrator free download adobe photoshop software Adobe Dreamweaver CS4 learning management systems using adobe flash adobe illustrator cs for dummies Adobe Fireworks CS4 serial number adobe photoshop elements 4.0 adobe illustrator automated web drawings Adobe Flash CS4 Professional adobe photoshop lightroom evaluation

Tag Archive for 'customer service'

tip of the week: ignore customers

One day, a man named Dustin Curtis tried to book an American Airlines flight via the company’s official website, aa.com. A computer programmer and designer, he was horrified by how complicated it was to use the website. Rather than just being pissed off, Curtis published a post on his blog explaining how he would redesign the AA.com site to make it more efficient and user-friendly. The next day, he got an email from a designer at the company. Among other things, the email said:

The group running AA.com consists of at least 200 people spread out amongst many different groups, including, for example, QA, product planning, business analysis, code development, site operations, project planning, and user experience. We have a lot of people touching the site, and a lot more with their own vested interests in how the site presents its content and functionality. Fortunately, much of the public-facing functionality is funneled through UX, so any new features you see on the site should have been vetted through and designed by us before going public.

However, there are large exceptions. For example, our Interactive Marketing group designs and implements fare sales and specials (and doesn’t go through us to do it), and the Publishing group pushes content without much interaction with us… Oh, and don’t forget the AAdvantage team (which for some reason, runs its own little corner of the site) or the international sites (which have a lot of autonomy in how their domains are run)… Anyway, I guess what I’m saying is that AA.com is a huge corporate undertaking with a lot of tentacles that reach into a lot of interests. It’s not small, by any means.

Curtis printed parts of the letter on his blog, but left the employee’s name and position anonymous. That wasn’t good enough for pissed-off AA executives, who searched their employees’ emails until they found the culprit. The employee was then fired. They did have a good reason - namely, that the employee violated the Non-Disclosure Agreement he had signed promising not to disclose details of the company’s operation - but many believe that firing the employee was an act of spite.

Remember, kids: this is what happens when you tell people the truth about the lame bureaucracy at your job. What can we learn from this? Two things: one, if you’re going to respond to a blogger or customer who has some complaints about your department, do so from your personal email account; and two, don’t fly American.