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...Home ... Editorial ... Columns ..Column Story Thursday: January 14, 2010
TechMentor Conferences


 Kohut's Corner  
Kevin Kohut
Kevin Kohut


 The Joy of Tech Support
As most IT pros know, when calling a vendor's technical support line, you may just encounter the inanely stupid.
by Kevin Kohut  
4/10/2002 -- So, you consider yourself an IT professional, someone who has all the answers and is able to solve even the most complex networking or system problem. Welcome to the club! We techies pride ourselves on our ability to fix things IT and to get our users back on the happy road of successful computing. But the true IT professional also knows that you can't always go it alone -- sometimes you need to call the dreaded technical support

Ah, the love-hate relationship we have with the various tech support organizations we must deal with. We know we need the answers that often only they can provide, yet we dread the hassles that almost always accompany any tech support call. So read on, my faithful techie compatriots, and commiserate with me as I share some shocking but true stories culled from my many encounters with tech support.

What Model Was That Again?
I was installing an external SCSI CD burner for a client -- this was back a few years, before CD burners became another plug 'n' play ubiquitous peripheral. It just refused to work. In fact, I was called in because none of the regular installation techs from the company I was working for were able to get it working. They actually pulled me off of a huge migration project to deal with this problem.

I called the manufacturer's tech support department.

Auto Attendant: "Thank you for calling Tech Support. Your satisfaction is our goal. We strive to provide the utmost in customer care and service. This call may be recorded for quality assurance purposes. Our menu items have recently changed, so please listen to all the following options before making your selection. Thank you. Press 1 for replacement CDs or user manuals. Press 2 to order replacement parts. Press 3 for the temperature of our warehouse. Press 4 for tech support."

I press 4.

AA: "Thank you for calling Tech Support. Your satisfaction is our goal. We strive to provide the utmost in customer care and service. This call may be recorded for quality assurance purposes. Our menu items have recently changed, so please listen to all the following options before making your selection. Thank you. Press 1 for printers. Press 2 for closet organizers. Press 3 for CD burners. Press-"

I press 3, but nothing happens. I guess I have to wait until all the choices are listed. I press 3 again. This time it works.

AA: "Thank you for calling Tech Support. Your satisfaction is our goal. We strive to provide the utmost in customer care and service. This call may be recorded for quality assurance purposes. Our menu items have recently changed, so please listen to all the following options before making your selection. Thank you. Press 1 for model numbers that begin with S. Press 2 for model numbers that begin with Q. Press 3 if you don't know what model number you have."

I press 1.

AA: "Please enter the numerical portion of your model number, followed by the pound sign."

I follow directions.

AA: "Thank you. A technical support agent will be with you shortly."

Annoying music. More annoying music. Still more annoying music. I'm almost asleep at this point.

Tech Support: "Hello, this is Tom with Tech Support. Can I please get the type of peripheral and the model number?"

Know the Difference Between Business and Consumer?

Tech Support: "Thank you for calling support. How may I help you?"

Me: "Hi, my name is Kevin and I'm calling from XYZ corp. We're one of your BUSINESS DSL subscribers. It appears that one of your routers is down. Can you please verify this and correct as required?"

TS: "Sure. But first, what operating system are you using?"

Me: "You need to know what OS I am running in order to check one of your routers?! This is a BUSINESS. Our whole corporate network is connected to our BUSINESS DSL line. Can you please check your router?"

TS: "I need to know what OS you are running first!"

Me: "OK, let's see. Windows 2000 Server, Windows 2000 Professional, Windows 98, Mac OS 9, Red Hat Linux 7.1. Here at this BUSINESS we run several OSs. Now can you check your router?"

TS: "Sir, can you please tell me just one operating system-the one that is running on the computer connected to the DSL line."

Me: "Fine. Windows 2000 Server."

TS: "We don't support software issues on Windows 2000 Server. I won't be able to help you."

I hung up at this point. When I called back, I chose the option to speak with sales, instead of tech support. I told the sales rep that we would be canceling our service unless the router problem was fixed. He hooked me up with someone who didn't care what OS I was running, and sure enough, they had a bad port on one of their routers!

Don't Tell Me How To Do My Job!
Another DSL problem, this time with a different provider.

Tech Support: "Thank you for calling. How may I help you?"

Me: "Our DSL speed has been way too slow for over two days now. I've run several speed tests, and it appears that our circuit is not provisioned correctly on your DSLAM."

TS: "What's a DSLAM? Is that the kind of DSL modem you have? We don't support that type."

Me: "Well, the DSLAM is what our DSL line connects to in your Central Office. Perhaps I should be talking to someone else, maybe someone who knows a little more about the way your DSL network actually works."

TS: "Thank you, sir. I can help you with that. Please be patient sir while I get more information in this."

More of that annoying music.

TS: "Sir, we'll need to send a technician out to your office to test your DSLAM. What time tomorrow would be good?"

I tried to explain, again, that a DSLAM was located at their office, and that all they needed to do was take a peek at our configuration to verify what speed we were configured for. But, no luck. So we waited for this technician to arrive the next day.

Of course, he never came. So I called support again, and this time the person knew what a DSLAM was, but still wouldn't check the configuration. She promised to call me back in an hour or so after she did more research on the issue.

An hour and a half later, having not heard back from anyone, I called back. I couldn't reach the rep I had talked with before, but the person I did reach offered to help me.

Tech Support: "I see the notes on your issue, sir. It looks like we need to verify that our DSLAM is configured correctly. Just a moment, this won't take but a minute&.OK, I'm back. It was mis-configured. I fixed it, you should be fine now."

Share Your Experience!
I'd love to hear your tech support stories -- post them below. And if you happen to be working in a tech support position, I'd love to hear your comments as well. Just make sure to mention the model number in all correspondence!


Kevin Kohut has been involved with information technology in some form or another for over 18 years, and has a strong business management background as well. As a computer consultant Kevin has helped both small businesses and large corporations realize the benefits of applying technology to their business needs.

 


More articles by Kevin Kohut:

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There are 48 CertCities.com user Comments for “The Joy of Tech Support”
Page 2 of 5
4/12/02: Yoda47 says: The only thing worse than calling tech support is working tech support. When you're one of about 10 smart people on a helpdesk of about 50, it's even worse. Not only do we have to deal with irate users, we also have to deal with the clueless tech that the user talked to 5 min. ago. It also doesn't help that when I started 3 years ago, the training class I was in went for 3 weeks before they let us answer any calls. Now that training time is down to 2 weeks, and the trainies take calls on about the 3rd day. I've had several calls from 1st level techs who don't know how to check an IP address (and thus can't figure out why the user can't login.) Another good one is a helpdesk tech telling me that the user is getting a "Non-system disk or disk error". Most of them have not check the floppy drive, and the ones that did and report it empty can't figure out what could be wrong. And if you do get a tech that knows what they are doing, he'll most likely be bitter from dealing with not so smart people constantly.
4/12/02: Charles says: I had a horrible experience with HP's email support. The issue is still unresolved. Every so often I have to delete a bunch of .idx and .pdl files (1.5 GB worth!) that are (for some reason)being created and not deleted automatically in the WINNT folder of my print server. I email their tech support and get back the response, "Hello Charles, Thank you for contacting HP's Customer Care e-mail support. I understand that the hard drive is filling up with files due to which you are unable to print from your DeskJet 990Cxi files. When printing with Driver Version 2.3.2 of HP Deskjet 9xxC series printers in Windows NT 4.0, the two temp files with extensions, 'idx' and 'pdl' (hpdj000.idx and hpdj000.pdl), are created in the WINNT folder instead of in the TEMP folder. Network administrators can print, but users can not. Instructions Network administrators should redirect the idx and pdl files to the TEMP folder. Log on as administrator, then make sure all users have the necessary permissions to write and to delete for the TEMP folder. To do so, follow these instructions:" I follow the instructions and it does not work. They make it sound like it is a permissions issue by saying that the administrator can print but users cannot. But the hard drive is full!!! That is why NOONE can print. I reply stating the fact that what they sent me didn't fix the problem and I got a reply with a link to search.hp.com and a document number to search for. I tried going to the search site and entered the document number listed and got nothing. There was no such document. I replied to that saying that I couldn't view the document they sent me and asked if I could get a direct link to the document instead of me having to search for it or to have it pasted in an email. I get a response with the document pasted in it this time and it says, "Instructions Network administrators should redirect the idx and pdl files to the TEMP folder. Log on as administrator, then make sure all users have the necessary permissions to write and to delete for the TEMP folder. To do so, follow these instructions:" It was the same exact email! Now I have wasted four days and have received the SAME response 3 times!!! I gave up and decided I would just delete the files when they built up.
4/13/02: Keith Burton says: Always get the name of the person who in the end knows their stuff and can fix the problem for you without any fuss. As well as having their name handy for next time you call, Get the name of their Manager and be sure to tell them how helpful that person is and how much of an asset they are to the company. In short dont just complain about bad staff, make a point of pointing out who the good staff are, they are the ones that deserve the pay rises and promotion.
4/13/02: james says: nothing, and i mean *nothing*, is worse than the "support" i've received from Dell. level 1 support from any company is likely a joke anyway, but even some of Dell's more senior people have not Clue #1. for example, i told one of the techs in escalations (or whatever Dell happens to call it) that i was receiving error messages from the POST. the question, which had also been asked by the clueless tech in level 1, was "Have you reinstalled the os". when i answered "no" and went on to say "and i'm not going to either", i was told that i was being *uncooperative* and (basicall) that i wouldn't be helped if i would not follow instructions. there are so many problems with this scenario that i don't have the time, the space, or the energy to explain. if you are a tech, *especially* one from Dell, and do not understand the above, please *quickly* get a clue or quit. also, the person who hired you and your trainer should both be fired immediately anyway. after 5 MONTHS of this cr@p, i still have no satisfaction, because according to Dell the system is "used". WTF!! Dell's current marketing slogan should be a question rather than a statement; from "Dude, you're getting a Dell" to "Dude, WHY are you getting a Dell?!"
4/15/02: Steve says: I have to agree sometimes with James about Dell tech support. I recently called to get a replacement power supply for a desktop that would not even light the power light after a week of shutting down by itself in ever shortening intervals. The first thing the Dell tech wanted to know was if the system was still running the OS that it was shipped with. It has been my experience that Dell techs must be told to make the caller go away once per system and listen closely on the next call for the same system. My Dell system can burst into flames on power up, but the first tech support call will get something like "try another monitor".
4/17/02: Carl says: Gateway website is the poorest for finding any driver that is needed.... Lack of attention to detail- You'll be on it till the cow comes home
4/17/02: matt says: has anyone delt with adelphia cable modems and there "helpless desk", aka tier 1. Adelphia has this bad habbit of binding mac addresses to a modem via there servers, hence when you move a modem from one nic or router to a differnt one, vola, no dynamic ip can be found for 3 hours, (dhcp lease time) solution: call adelphia or wait. calling adelphia tech support could mean anywhere from 20 minutes to 1.5 hours (no joke, did that once)wait. (thankyou god for Direct TV's idea of a wait time (5 min max). Anyway, after a hold time of 30 minutes, i get some tech who cant find a suppervisor ( all just went into a meeting at 4:30 pm, ya right) has no idea what teir 2 is, and refues to release an mac mapping (2 seconds with the mac on the modem) ADELPHIA's SOLUTION= wait 3 hours and it should come back up, tell that to my customer who is paying me 95 bucks an hour! needless to say, direct tv here we come. howerver, call press 2 to setup a new accout and a person answers the phone! When adelphia can think about supporting its customer base, instead of just being there to sign up, We can give this a 2nd try. Please if there is any adelphia techs out there, please post back to give some insight!
4/18/02: Lee says: I have to agree with Steve, we had the same problem on a Dell workstation and it took them literally months to finally agree it was the hardware and ship us a new power supply. The machine is rebooting itself regardless of what software is on it, but they had the techs reinstall no less than 5 or 6 times. It is ridiculous. I recommend anyone signing a contract for pc's from Dell to indicate that their technician word is sufficient. We should not have to jump through hoops after isolating a problem. OH, and that Dell diagnostics cd....the one that takes 5-15 hours to run, has yet to come up with the right error. They shouldn't even waste the CD's on it.
4/18/02: Nyert says: A different angle -- the Helpless Desk "technician" who escalates problems that he/she should be able to fix, or esculates to people who have no involvement with the problem system (and no way to help). My wife's company Helpless Desk has degenerated into a answering service. They don't even try to help callers, they just pass the buck onto anybody that they know the home telephone number for. Then they lie about what they did! One of the worst examples: the night of the SuperBowl, a Helpless Desk "technician" called my wife at home and wanted her to fix a communications problem for an application system that my wife had no information about and no access to. My wife told the Helpless Desk that she couldn't log into that system to try to look at it, but she would try to contact somebody who could. Not two minutes later our phone rings again, and it's her boss (two levels up) demanding to know why my wife refuses to fix this communications problem that was three days old! After I straighten out this a-hole's attitude a bit, we determine that the Helpless Desk has been aware of the problem for three days but has not done anything about it -- not even esculate -- until now. My wife goes into work and drags in a couple more people who have the necessary access, and helps solve the problem. On Monday, that Helpless Desk "technician" tells her upper management that my wife refused to work on the problem because she wanted to watch the SuperBowl. My wife couldn't give a cr@p about the SuperBowl, plus she went to work during her time off to coordinate a fix on somebody else's system! Fortunately all Helpless Desk calls are recorded (both in and out) and also after-hours building entries and exits are logged, so it was easy to show management that the Helpless "technician" was lying. At least my wife got apologies (from everybody accept that "technician") but the "technician" is still there doing the same lousy job because she is a minority and it would be politically incorrect to fire her!
4/18/02: Eric says: AAAAAHHHR the script reading "tech" is spreading faster then i imagined , up to now i had only encountered in Canada , US , France and australia , gee i guess it's better (i.e cheaper for the company) to have non technical first on the line and annoy clients then to solve problems i a quick and efficient way for happy custies that know they will get the service they diserve the DSLAM story was just plain tooooo good ,
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