Quote:
Originally Posted by Bobblehead
The other issue is that 95% of the people calling in are the type of people that a reboot will fix their issue.
I'm sure anyone who has worked tech support knows that for every person who calls in and actually knows what they are doing there are 20 that don't have a clue and 10 more that talk a good game but still don't have a clue.
The number of times I have been on my company's internal help desk, and had to convince somebody to go ahead and reboot again (I usually tell them it is so I can hear the 'beep' in case there is a message) and that magically fixes their problem.
In last night's case it is beyond belief that they had no idea there was something wrong. But I've been on Telus for 5+ years and the only issue I've had was my modem died, which they came and replaced.
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Actually, it isn't beyond belief. Communication between groups is notoriously bad at a lot of places. It is entirely believable that the network team was looking into an issue, but didn't bother to tell the help desk lead. Or, the HD lead didn't bother to tell the staff. The front-line people could easily have been in the dark.
But you are right on the cluelessness of many end users. Couple that with the fact that help desk is usually an entry level position, and you end up with techs reading from scripts - 1. because they don't know any better yet, and 2. because the simple stuff really does fix most problems.
Shaw will be no better than Telus in this regard.
The company I work for recently outsourced our help desk, desktop and network teams. Everybody at work hates the help desk because they are all new people in Mississauga, who don't know our systems yet. But the appreciation for people like me, who remained with the company through this changeover, has gone sky high. I know the systems, and I can usually fix it faster than if they call help desk first... much to my annoyance.