Categories
General

The sad state of Customer Service

I’ve been hyping iBurst in the past week or so… its Amazing!  However their customer support is not so amazing.  They’ve not yet launched commercially, but they have a great service! It kick’s Telkom‘s butt!  Yeah, lots of people have complained over at mybroadband.co.za, but iBurst is working on the problems and they are getting fixed – even if it is happening slowly.  Fortunately I’m not experiencing 1/2 the problems that some other people seem to have.  However today I experienced their call centre, and I was not impressed.  It reminded me of dealing with “other banks” before I moved to 20Twenty, it reminded me of a call I made to MNet recently…


You see, my decoder had been fried, so I took it in to be swapped out… (I have analog MNet, not DSTV) The lady behind the desk tuned it all for me before I left their customer support desk, but she made a slight mistake.  When I got home, I made sure that the TV was tuned into the decoder’s signal properly, but for some reason my MNet channel was fuzzy…  If I put the decoder onto the CSN channel (also an encoded channel), the picture was perfect… So I assumed that either the lady at the support desk didn’t tune it right, or there was a problem with one of their transmitters.  I waited a few days and it didn’t clear up, so I called them.  I asked if there were problems with their transmitters and they said no, so I asked them to tell me how to tune my decoder so that I could fix the problem. (I also explained the problem to them)… The lady proceeded to ask me to test that my TV was tuned into the Decoder correctly – even though I’d already told her that it was.  She then proceeded to tell me that
   a) my decoder must therefore be faulty,
   b) my arial was incorrectly positioned, or
   c) my decoder needed to be “cleared” (or something like that)…


A) My decoder was not faulty, because it could display CSN at home, and it could display the MNet pretty clearly at home, and it was clear when it was tuned at their offices
B) It was highly unlikely that my arial had “fallen down” in hour it took me to take the old decoder to their offices, and return with the new one.  And anyway, if my arial was broken, surely I wouldn’t get CSN clearly either?
C) My decoder was decoding fine, there were no error messages on the screen


All I wanted was for her to tell me how to tune it… So I told her that, to which she responded “Sir, you called us for help, so let me help you”.  That just pissed me off, I knew what the problem was, I’d explained the same things to her about 5 times already, and still she was trying to get me to flick the “test” switch at the back of the decoder to check that it really was tuned in ok and that I hadn’t lied to her the previous 5 times.  Eventually I kinda lost it with her, and she put me on hold… When she came back she asked me a few more questions and said in an “I told you so” type tone – “Sir, it sounds like you need to re-tune your decoder.”  Now I was livid, so I pointed out that that was EXACTLY what I’d asked her to tell me how to do 20 minutes ago when I first spoke to her.  She eventually explained how to do it, and within 5 minutes I had my MNet signal back up and running perfectly.


That’s how I felt this morning talking to iBurst support.  I take the modem to work with me (in Centurion) so that I can stream audio and check my mail, and its worked fine for the past week.  This morning I could “dial in” and logon, but after that nothing worked… I could ping one of the iBurst routers, but nothing more.  So I called, and spoke to “Sheila”.  I was first told that my PC’s settings were wrong and so it was my fault.  But I was able to work perfectly for the past week, so surely then iBurst must have changed something… “No sir, someone must have changed a setting on your PC to make it not work”.  I mean, do I sound so totally dense on the phone that she thinks I’ll buy that?  Anyway, she shows me how to set my MTU and TCP Recieve Window (or something like that)… and oddly enough the MTU setting she gave me is not the one that they recommend you use in their FAQ. So I now really don’t trust her advice (as if I did before this point).  So I ask her what iBurst has changed, since nothing had changed on my PC, and she suggested that perhaps I was connecting via the Sandton base station “because they’re experiencing authentication problems there”.  Sandton is about 40km away, so there is NO WAY I’d be picking up their signal – all she had to do was to ask for my UTID and she could find out which base station I was connected to – but she didn’t bother to do that.  And anyway, I wasn’t having authentication problems, I’d logged in fine.  But I dutifully changed my MTU settings, and had to reboot my PC.  So I said I’d call her back when it was up again.


It was no suprise that her MTU change didn’t help at all, so I called again.  This time talking to someone else who “put me on hold” (a.k.a moved the mouthpiece away from their mouth while they proceeded to chat to some of the other call center agents, leaving me to listen in to their conversation).  Eventually she tells me that Sheila is still busy, and would I let her call me back. (I’ve read many stories about these famous call back’s… they all say the same thing – it never happens) So I asked if she could perhaps help me.  I told her the story and almost immediately she says that yes, they do have a problem in Centurion.  After some more questioning I find out that she’s not sure what it is or when it will be fixed.  I also ask her why Sheila didn’t tell me that after my first call, and why they haven’t logged it on the incident report page on their website.  For both questions she doesn’t really know… But if I keep trying, it will come right. So I accept that, and go back to trying…


Soon afterwards (11pm), I get a bit peeved at the way the call was handled – so I e-mail the help desk, one of their more public client contacts, and the guys at FusionReactor (who sold me the solution) – basically I just want to raise awareness of the problem, and the negative impact their call center is having.


Around 1pm or so I call again because its still not working, and there still is no report on their incident reporting page.  This time I speak to Tsepo who tells me that they’re having problems with their radio connections in Pretoria East and Centurion.  I ask when it will be fixed, he says he doesn’t know but they’ve just sent technicians out. I ask why its not listed on their incident report page, and he says he doesn’t know.  I get more peeved because “we’ve just sent technicians” at 1pm, when my first call reporting the problem came through at about 9:30am! Anyway, at least he says he’ll call me back when its fixed, so I foolishly believe him.


At 3pm, I get an e-mail from their Chief Technical Officer, and the guy who is “one of their more public client contacts” (I can’t remember his title off hand, but his name is Shaun).  Both apologise and ask for my phone number so that they can call me.  About 30 minutes later I get a call from Shaun.  He apologises and lets me know what the situation is, and says that he’s hoping it will be fixed by the end of the day, he gave me his cell phone number incase it doesn’t get fixed.  I basically try to tell him that my concern is more for the fact that such an amazing technology is having its reputation ruined by a small group of people in their call center. (Read the comments on mybroadband.co.za for more info on that)  And I think I requested again that someone log the incident on their incident report page.


At 7:48pm I get a response from FusionReactor (I’d seen his communication to the Chief Technical Officer, so I knew that he had been getting involved), he basically says what I already knew… They’re busy fine tuning the system, and adding new base stations and so while its unfortunate that the problems arise, they will be fixed by launch… Oddly enough it seems from their responses as if I am one of the few people who is quite happy with the service and who understands that there will be some problems while its basically being beta tested. (Fortunately I actually have had very few problems)…  My biggest frustration is that iBurst offer an amazing service at an excellent cost, and I wouldn’t change to any of the other options we have available in South Africa because they all seem to be so inferior (personal bias)… BUT the “brand”, reputation, trust, and integrity of the company and their amazing service is being sorely let down by bad communication, and a call center that’s not very well skilled in the art of Public Relations, Care, Honesty and Professionalism.  Oh, and there still is no log on their incident report about what went wrong today in Centurion, and now that I think about it, I didn’t even see anything about their authentication problems in Sandton… So why even have an incident report page if they’re not going to use it?


I guess what makes me even more frustrated is that they’re not alone in their lack of communication.  Many SA companies have made the same mistakes, even Microsoft made that mistake but at least Microsoft is learning (e.g. the whole blogging movement in microsoft)… I can’t say it enough… iBurst is excellent, their support however leaves something to be desired.  I actually dread my next call to them, and that is NOT a good thing when they are the only representatives of iBurst that I have contact with now that I’m a client of theirs. 


Maybe I’m also frustrated because I know how it feels to be inside a company where you care about its products, but where your enthusiasm for the company/product is not shared by those who deal with clients all day.  Shaun seems to be in that position.  I’ve been there before – the techies tell you something which you pass on to customers, only to find out that the techies lied, or didn’t do what they promised, and so you end up with egg on your face dealing with frustrated clients all the time because someone else didn’t care enough to actually help the clients who are paying for their salaries.  That was one of the reasons I ended up leaving one of my previous employers – it becomes very draining to continually fight the same battles hoping that something will change in the attitudes of the people who are the first contact for frustrated clients.  So I do not envy the situation that Shaun is in, and I certainly hope his company recognises it before its too late. 


I ended up with migranes every weekend, a fairly shattered social life, failing health due to stress, and a great fear every morning before I had to go into work…  I know that Shaun was off sick a few times in the past month, so I hope he’s not going through what happened to me… and I certainly hope that something changes for the better very soon.


[Update: I got called by Shaun and the CTO of iBurst this morning.  The CTO explained well what went wrong, and said that basically the Help Desk guys will be logging everything on the incident report system, but for now they’re basically moving so fast rolling out the services before the launch that it gets left out sometimes, and it is a priority for them. He sounds like a really nice guy, and it sounds like they’re looking at improving the entire Help Desk experience from top to bottom.  And I can live with that, after all, we’re the beta testers of their service, so we can’t expect it to be 100% functional.  The network is awesome so I don’t mind a few hassles.;-)]

Categories
General Internet/Links

“The Book Stops Here”

I just read a Wired News article “The Book Stops Here” about Wikipedia, which just re-affirmed my enthusiasm about Wikipedia.  So I popped onto Wikipedia to see if I could add anything to it and I saw that they had a link to articles that have been requested for over a year.  I’m gonna try and see if there’s one that I can add when I get home. 


The question I pose to you is not what can Wikipedia do to help you, but what can you do to help Wikipedia?  πŸ™‚

Categories
General Humour

Quote of the Day

“There is a possibility of peace, but unfortunately there is also a possibility of war”
– Perez de Queliar, Secretary General of the UN

A friend of mine (John) MSN’d me the quote, which he got from an e-mail.  I’m not sure in what context that was said so I could be way off, but wouldn’t it have been better to say “I don’t know” or “No comment” or “It could go either way”.  I guess his way of saying it sounds more official, and makes him sound far more intelligent than my options… But it all comes down to the same thing – he doesn’t actually have a clue.  πŸ˜‰

Categories
Geek food General Humour Internet/Links

Mid week humour

I was just reading one of Scoble‘s blog entries about the Numa Numa Dance, so I checked out his link to the Numa Numa video and almost wet myself.  Its a cool song and a cool dance.  Seriously, check it out…

The link path goes something like this:  Gary Brolsma from Saddle Brook, New Jersey recorded the video > Via who knows which friend > New Grounds> Via various news feeds > The Daily Collegian > Purging Poison (Bad Monkey got here via The Birth of Venus)> Bad Monkey > Scoble > Me > You

Categories
Geek food General

Last one… I promise… ;-)

Ok, so here’s my last praise for iBurst. I’ve left the iBurst modem at home for the last few days since my work only had 30-40% signal, but I noticed the other day that Centurion’s base station was actually still being implemented.  Hoping that it would improve, I brought my modem to work today.  70-80% signal.  280kbps download (I’ve not been stretching it much so it possibly could go higher)  So I now have fast internet at home and at work… 

Can you tell that I’m just a bit excited about this?  πŸ˜‰

(Oh, I just downloaded a file at 100kBytes per second, can this get any better? :-))

Categories
General

Speed is good…

It really is… (no, not speed the drug, but speed as in bandwidth)  This weekend I did a Skype conference call to 2 other local wireless broadband users, I Skyped out to my mom in Belgium for almost an hour (Costing me about R6.50), I checked out previews of some awesome movies, watched some music video’s via Windows Media Player, listened to a whole bunch of radio stations, and downloaded a bunch of DotNetRocks episodes.


Now I just need to get a better mic (my current one buzzes a bit) and a web cam, and I’ll be all set to make video calls…  My step-sister* (Evy) has a web cam, so while I was Skyping out to my mom, I was also watching them on their web cam.  It was actually really cool, watching the web cam just adds an extra level of interaction that you’d not normally get on a phone, and I was pretty suprised as to how quickly I adjusted to it… it just felt natural to be able to see the person you’re talking to.  I guess I also know the layout of my mom’s home, so I could almost picture myself sitting in the room she was in, which kinda made it just that little bit more “real”.


And I also want/need a new TV card in my PC so I can record TV shows, and write them to CD so we can build up a library of movies without having to spend a fortune on tapes for the VCR (which is starting to need a service – its recording quality is getting kinda bad)  My current TV card just hangs my PC… I *KNOW* I had this problem the last time I had it in my PC, and I *KNOW* I fixed it, but I can’t seem to get it right this time… (I think it had something to do with my sound card’s IR remote control and its IR remote control clashing)  My current TV card even has an SDK I can download so that I could write my own software to control it, so it would be great to get it working because then I could write myself a mobile web app that would let me start it recording programs via my cellphone…


*She’s kinda my step sister, but I’m not sure if it would be “legally” correct to call her that.  You see my mom wanted to get married again but both her and her new husband didn’t want the legal side of it. (They’d both been divorced before and really didn’t want the hassles, so they wanted a wedding and wanted to publicly commit to each other, but just didn’t want the legalities)  So relationally she’s my step-sister, but “legally” she’s not. Ok, so I’m just being pedantic… but to someone out there it might just be important. πŸ˜‰

Categories
General

Ignoring potential customers is BAAAAAAD, m’kay?

I mailed about 5 of the iBurst resellers on Tuesday at about 10am asking them for pricing and other info about getting an iBurst connection from them.  FusionReactor called me back in about 10 minutes… Nobody else responded, until now.  I just got an e-mail from one of the resellers saying that they’re out of stock, etc, etc, and will only be able to help me in March. 


I read it, and couldn’t help thinking “Gee, Mr IT Company… if it takes you 3 days to reply to an e-mail from a potential customer looking to buy your product, how many weeks will I have to wait for you to reply to support queries after I become your customer?”  Its one of those “Get a clue!” moments, when you just have an urge to beat the company’s sales team to a pulp with a clue stick.  If I was their manager that’s certainly what I’d do.  Ok, so maybe they were busy, or maybe they had some IT problems, or maybe they just don’t care.  In all of those cases it doesn’t send a good message to potential clients, in fact I don’t think I’ll be asking them for information in future… when I e-mail a company querying one of their products I expect to hear back from them in at MOST 24 hours. If not, I can only assume that you don’t really care about your product, your customers, or your company’s sales figures.  And if you don’t care, why should I?

Categories
Geek food General

Faster!! Faster!!

I just can’t believe the speeds I was downloading at last night at home on my iBurst connection!  Whatever they did to the base station I connect to worked!  Last night I was downloading about 3 things at once with a combined download speed of 80-90kBytes per second – thats 640 to 720 kbits per second!!!  Then this morning I thought I’d quickly check again to see if the speed was still there… again I got 85kBytes per second!


It used to frustrate me no end that it would take me about a week to download the latest DotNetRocks episode on my modem… This morning I downloaded an episodce in about 15 minutes (probably less but I was doing other things).


Imagine if this technology takes off in a big way in South Africa…. I remember working at ISPs doing web development where one of my biggest pains was that you couldn’t use some of the nifty features in .Net because having loads of return trips to the server just was not an option using our bandwidth.  I can just imagine the awesome things that all this extra speed would enable.


Sure, it could enable sloppy coding and encourage bad habits in developers – but I’m choosing not to focus on that… The web could become far richer (far less “thin client”), and so much more useful. πŸ™‚  I can’t wait till I can go home tonight to play with it again. (After I’ve taken my wife out for a little date (dinner and a movie), otherwise she might start to get the impression that I spend more time with the computer than with her… ;-))

Categories
General

iBurst…

A few weeks ago I decided that my bad old dial-up was wasting my time and money… I’d spend 45 minutes downloading 10 emails – mainly because my modem kept disconnecting every 10 minutes, and when it was connected it was kinda slow.

So I looked at my alternatives… ADSL, MyWireless, and iBurst.  My phone bills were about R400 per month, and my ISP costs me about R75 per month.  My wife and I are meant to be trying to call my mom and her gran who live in Belgium and England respectively.  So we could easily add another R100 to that bill, and with VOIP, that R100 would drop to under R5.  The total so far for using the current telkom line and dial-up is R575.  Not having the cash to spend on a modem, I decided to take a 24 month contract which includes a free modem.

I like the idea of a wireless connection because then I could use it at work and home…  and my impression of iBurst’s coverage is that its pretty good.   A friend of mine has iBurst and he’s had some amazing download speeds so I was pretty sold on the idea of using them, but I did a quick spreadsheet totalling how much I’d spend over two years on each of the options.  The cheapest was Sentech’s MyWireless 128kbps, next was iBurst (R1100 more expensive than Sentech), and since my friend had gotten > 128kbps on iBurst pretty regularly (in fact he was doing 384kbps regularly), I thought I’d try them.

I looked into various resellers, and compared them to getting the deal directly from iBurst.  Most of the resellers have SHOCKING websites, and non-existant response to queries.  However, I found out that FusionReactor offered it with only R100 startup, as opposed to iBurst’s R465 startup cost.  I also noticed that they seem to be one of the biggest Cold Fusion development houses in South Africa, and that iBurst’s online ordering system was done in Cold Fusion (or at least in Macromedia based technologies).  So I e-mailed them a query through their site and they responded in under 10 minutes with a phone call to answer my questions.  I eventually found out that they’d been involved with iBurst for a while and had developed/implemented some of their support systems, so they’re pretty tightly linked into the iBurst backend systems.  So that was enough to reassure me that they’re not some fly-by-night crowd.

I filled out my forms and faxed them off, and in just over 24 hours the iBurst terminal was delivered to my office (in Centurion).  I was REALLY impressed, very few companies that I’ve dealt with are that fast with ANYTHING, and very few are as kind, friendly and quick to respond to customer queries.  I was very happy. πŸ˜€

With only partial coverage in our office (30-50% signal), I got about 12-15kByte per second downloads, which is WAAAAAY faster than my usual work connection.  Since using it at work wasn’t my main priority, I’m ok with that… But using it at home was another story… I have 95-100% signal strength, but only 6-8kBytes per second download speed.  Unfortunately for me, I’m connecting to a base station which is “faulty” and is being repaired (should be fixed by Saturday)…

Today I read that Telkom has now suddenly dropped the price of their ADSL lines, so if the speed is not fixed by Monday I might have to reconsider my decision to go with iBurst – the Telkom HomeDSL 194 might be a better option, but I’ll miss the mobility.  I really hope iBurst fixes the speed on the base stations I connect to at home, because I’d hate to lose the nice connection I can get at work…

Categories
General

Lessons Learned

Today I did some learning, and it wasn’t a fun learning… You might remember a while ago (like about a year ago) I was rather peeved because a certain person who I had done some freelance work for was not paying me.  I mentioned one of his excuses (that he’d paid another developer with the same first name as me by mistake and later he made the excuse that he was still waiting for them to pay him back so he could pay me).  In that excuse I mentioned the other developer’s full name.  I didn’t say that he was “bad”, I but I did say that he was involved because of the client’s mistake, and I also mentioned that the client had let me know that he was aparently waiting for my namesake to pay him back.

Someone recently found that entry on my blog (only about 30 people have viewed that entry in the year) and he e-mailed me to say that I should not have mentioned someone’s name in such a bad way.  When I wrote the entry, I did not intend for it to appear as though my namesake had been at fault in any way… I was fairly sure that it was just a feeble excuse on behalf of the client.  But clearly my namesake interpreted it differently… I’m guessing (although I can’t prove it) that the person who e-mailed me knew my namesake and passed on the URL to him, because soon afterwards (while I was in the middle of updating the blog entry), I saw an e-mail from my namesake ordering me to remove his name from the site or else he’d follow up with legal action.

Anyway, I learned that mentioning peoples names is not a good idea in a blog, even if you don’t intend the mention to put them in a bad light.  Of course, only people who knew this developer and his previous work history could have made a positive match that this guy was the guy that I was talking about in the blog… But still, I’m pretty sure that I was legally in the wrong to mention his name in any context, especially when I was using his name based on what one person’s testimony who, as it turned out, lied a whole bunch to me.  So I guess I should have gone back to the entry later and updated it to reflect the fact that the client was most likely lying, and to remove the other developer’s full name… (I probably should never have put in his full name to start with…)

But it got me thinking that I mentioned the client’s full name and his company name, and I (unfortunately) have no physical document proving my claims that he owes me money. (I have e-mails from him about most of the sites that I worked on, I have a friend who works there who can verify that I did work for them, and I have the source for the websites and the databases that they run off on my computer, but nothing from the client that actually accepts the costs/quotes I gave before I started working on the sites – most of the approvals happened over the phone, since he seemed to be out of the office regularly, and didn’t seem to always be able to e-mail me)  So I’ve now removed the client’s name and his company name from the blog too, just incase… 

I’d love to know what my rights are with regard to postings I make on the internet… In both cases I couldn’t prove that everything I had said was true – its not like I had an e-mail from the client claiming that my namesake had been mistakenly paid… I was told that when I went to the client’s offices to try and sort it out in person, and its not like I carry a tape recorder around with me to record every conversation I have incase I have to prove it later.  The whole “proving that I did do the work” thing was just stupidity on my behalf… I trusted the guy because a friend of mine knew him well and asked me to help the client out.  So I trusted that he would be honest – if my friend trusted him, so would I.  I guess I was a bit naive, but I’d like to think that it had less to do with my naivetΓ© and more to do with the bad nature of the client.  Anyway, I guess I better check my blog for any other name references that should be removed… just in case … but I wish I could know for certain if I needed to worry.