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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 5 of 5
8/6/02: anon says: I was always wondering how to explain the insanity of working in "tech support" to someone who never experienced it. Personally, I never could find the right way of explaining it to another person until I ran across this story. http://www.wmiller.com/nonIE/Express%20Online%20%20Current%20Issue%20%20Cover.htm It's a great story!
8/7/02: Becky Nagel says: Hey Anon - That is a great story -- thanks for sharing it! -- Becky
9/25/02: DAVID YOUNG says: For the last 3 weeks I have tried to get help from your tech.support I HAVE TO GET YOUR CORDLESS MOUSE.Two days ago purchased cordless keyboard and mouse. My key board works, but the will not work. Please help.
12/10/02: lih says: hi,max: I do want to know how you can break BIOS password of Netfinity 5000 Server. I have the same problem as you with it. Do you tell me. thanks
12/21/02: K.S. says: I work as a tier 1 tech for a major turnkey provider in the US and I would have to say that the *intelligent* agents suffer far more then any newbie customer ever cood. I challenge you to find any other job in the world where stupidity is encouraged, free thought is punished, and everyone's real abilities are ignored, in favor of canned scripts that either don't work, or waste everyone's time. I get harassment from supervisors for not kissing butt enough (like when someone vcalled in *REFUSING* to pay their bill, claiming they never signed up, even though his name, address, telephone number, and even the correct credit card number. So per the policy that I was explicitly told to follow, I let him know that since he is disputing the charges, the issue needs to go to billing/collections. Is this good enough for him? Oh HE*L no. Instead he keeps screaming about how he never signed up, demands personal information about me, and generally acts like a complete and total jerk. This is the typical customer that calls in usually. Rude. Antagonistic. Confrontational.... If they only knew that we aren't even the people they THINK they are screaming at.... And then there's management... Any time our director gets yelled at for something, she decides it's time to flex her authority by making some arbitrary policy change that accomlishes nothing other then increasing agent frustration, and accelerates burnout. Management doesn't really care about the agents in the center at all, in fact, they have been actively *FORCING* all of the old tier 1s to either quit, or firing them for BS reasons, and bringing in people who know nothing about computers, and would be better suited to outbound telemarketing. All they know how to do is read scripts anyway. There's also literally no room for advancement in the company unless you have your lips surgically bonded to the right butts. The only people who get promoted kiss so much butt it isn't even funny. The director aslo doesn't like it at ALL when someone comes up with a better way of ddoing things then she has implemented. if you dare to bring up a better way to anyone but her, she goes into "revenge" mode, and starts immediately looking for ANY reason to write you up, fire you, or generaly make you miserable. And when you complain to her about anything, does she care? nope. She just defends a BS situation, and justifies it with pretty business-speak... I would say I consider myself to be one of the few competent techs left in the center, having been working with computers since the days of the C64, and being familiar with pretty much any version of Windows, or MacOS that you could possibly throw at me. Not too shabby on the Linux knowledge either. Does this get recognized by the company? Not really. They just shrug, say "whatever, just follow the script, and if there isn't a script, escalate it. No outside screenshots." This means if you want to do anything they haven't written a script for, like setting up IE to connect automatically, sorry. Can't do that for you. Have to escalate it to a T2. And they are all busy anyway. Maybe you get a callback in a few days. Never mind that I could do it in seconds, as long as you listen and cooperate. And then there's America's INSANE devotion to "serving the customer". Don't get me wrong, now, I like to be treated right too, when I am spending money, but I don't expect to have the spaces between my toes licked clean by the people I am doing business with, while I am beating them upside the head, and spewing a neverending stream of insults and profanity at them. And why is it that this sanity destroying approach to customer service only seems to be in place in businesses *I* work for? Whenever I need something resolved, I always get attitude, apathy, and generally lousy service. Well, that's my rant on this. Hopefully I'll find another job soon so I can just quit and not have to deal with this BS anymore.
2/8/03: Anonymous says: Don't blame the Level 1 techs for everything. Helpdesk management is just as bad. At my company, when too many calls are holding, Level 1 is REQUIRED to take information and hang up. According to management callers feel that "Getting to speak to a person is more important than having the problem fixed". So during peak times, those of us that actually know what we're doing get forced into secretary mode.
6/3/04: Roger says: Hi! Have a trouble with Netfinity 5000 (the same problem like Max's) but without happy end - our support advised me to change the motherboard. Maybe somebody knows, how to correct this problem? Or maybe you can give me Max's e-mail... In all Internet only this page have some information about this f cking server! Sorry. for my English
3/28/09: SupportGuy from Canada says: I work as tech support for a vendor..the kind you talk about...and trust me, we get real stupid calls from senior techs and they whine and complain so much just cause they think they know it all....let me do my job dude! I gotta follow the policies too.
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