Forum > Blogs > Lessons from a Call Centre
Lessons from a Call Centre
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Mon, 05 Oct 2009 03:04:34
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It can be difficult to get a grasp of a person over the Internet, even in a social environment such as this.  For myself, one such attribute that may not be remotely perceptable is that I have little interest collaboration or socializing.  My career path has been shaped by a desire to be independent.  So as you may well imagine, you'd be hardpressed to choose a more inappropriate position for me than that of a representative in a call centre.


Fortunately the systems in place were so arcane and obtuse that there was still a substantial amount of knowledge involved, and thusly I was able to maintain a semblance of sanity by means of becoming a human encyclopaedia (a noted hobby of mine).  But that's not all I absorbed;  these are the lessons from one year in a call centre.

Americans Don't Listen


Sorry for the blunt statement, but this isn't quite what you think.  Not a matter of my own complaints of being ignored, but rather the flow of conversation.  Apparently shocking to many, I actual listen to people when they speak, and don't interrupt.  It's surreal to find that by doing merely this--by not talking over people--they themselves will stop to be reassured that I am in fact still on the phone.

American apparently is a different language than English


As some of you may have noticed, I can be a bit pedantic.  As such, I prefer to speak with correct grammar, though I mostly gave up due to nobody understanding what I was saying.  "To whom were you speaking?" is apparently too cryptic for many.

Read. Your. Bill.


A revolutionary idea, I know, but you should probably read your bill.  Incredibly common is for a caller to state, "My bill went up this month and I was calling in as to why".  Are you illiterate?

FFS stop using IE6


Internet Explorer 6 was released over 8 years ago.  When you've got hundreds of employees working entirely on web-based systems -- JavaScript intensive web-based systems -- all day long, you're losing an enormous amount of productivity to that utter piece of garbage.

If you sit me at a computer, I am going to make things in JavaScript


Tools to help on calls, various games, animations, even clocks.  I have an innate force to write web programs when at a computer.

Programming skills to the layman are indistinguishable from magic


Given enough time, inevitably as suggested by my previous point, there going to be a demonstration of my computer-savviness.  The most significant example of which was due to a design flaw in the systems we were using.  Discounts were listed on a page in drop down menues, and one such discounts would stay even after it had become obsolete on the account, yet prevent others.  Frustrated, I injected JavaScript into the page via the address bar to remove it, which actually worked.  Consequently this spread across the floor, baffling even the techy among them.


Another such incident had me gaining control of a digital display sign.  Since the sign, when not set up for proper display, would show its IP address, I was able to gain access and the one thing I could change on the display was the name of the sign.  So short messages could be changed.  Well, someone else then accessed the sign, changed the password and set the message to "You Lose".  Within 10 minutes I found a security vulnerability that allowed me to change the sign without the password.  I'm sure I just scarred whoever that was for life.


Speaking of which, I found cross-site request forgery in all the programs I tested.

By the averages, I am probably smarter than you


For a long time I had been primarily on the nurture side of the nature vs nurture debate when it came to intelligence.  To sound like a school counsellor, I had seen underachievers simply not applying themselves while clearly capable.  I can firmly at this point state that I have met far more who I am simply more mentally adept, which you wouldn't think would be a painful thought.  Though perhaps it's just that at this point I'm now speaking with adults who are too old and too far gone to show any semblance of prior brightness.

I hate everyone


Ultimately the foremost force behind my leaving was due to further and further emphasis and requirement of sales.  However, there is a separate issue that makes me wish I had gotten out much earlier, that being I feel as though I have been mentally poisoned.  It's a cesspool without allies; it's a battle of the worst, and all sides fighting selfishly to their own end.  Other employees and other departments shift blame, cheat the system and do whatever they can to avoid anything unpleasant.  Customers' sense of entitlement is inversely proportionate to their own ignorance.  The company's policies leverage its size and duopoly status in an increasingly abusive manner.  I hate the company; I hate the employees; I hate the callers.  It hurts so much.

Tears of joy isn't simply a metaphor


The phrase "tears of joy" has always confounded me.  It never really made sense to me about people saying that they cry at weddings.  I mean, even the happiest of times, it's more excitement that builds than anything else.  However, when you're essentially miserable for an extended period of time; have a crushing mental weight on you to the point of despair, and to see it finally vanish--the body lacks the capacity to express the feeling.  With such a rush of relief, I can now understand.

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Tell me to get back to rewriting this site so it's not horrible on mobile
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Mon, 05 Oct 2009 03:57:59
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Glad you got out of there. I worked at a parking department for a while and some of the calls that came in blew my mind.

What was this company you worked for and what did you have to cover?
660896.png
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Country: US
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Mon, 05 Oct 2009 04:41:36
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I won't go into the company specifics but it was customer retention for a telecommunications company (phone, Internet, TV).

I swear I was the only one outside of tech support who knew the difference between bits and bytes.  No, you're not getting 7 Megabytes per second, you're getting 7 Megabits per second, that's an 8-fold difference.  I had one woman say she had "7 Megatron Internet"  I was glad we had a mute button LOL

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Tell me to get back to rewriting this site so it's not horrible on mobile
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Mon, 05 Oct 2009 04:57:03
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7 megatron internet?

Australia really is far behind. Sad

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Mon, 05 Oct 2009 07:33:13
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LOL Megatron


The VG Press
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Mon, 05 Oct 2009 15:07:56
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"American apparently is a different language than English"

Yo, I gotta axe you something.


Anyway you beat my sister... she only lasted at a call centre for her week of training, plus a day and a half taking real calls. Although she said your call centre actually gives you a script to work from, where hers she had to wing it entirely. You may or may not have encountered far less per-capita swearing as well.
Edited: Mon, 05 Oct 2009 15:09:31

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Tue, 06 Oct 2009 09:35:19
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The first customer call I took in the US (ehn I was a fresh off the boat aussie ended with the called saying, "What bridge did they find you under?"  And he was right.

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Tue, 06 Oct 2009 18:10:38
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great read.  not hardly enough though.  if you expand it into a book it will be a best seller.

(of course then you will  be overcome by self-loathing knowing that imbeciles are buying your book in droves and recommending it to more imbeciles and laughing when they read it thinking they are better than the idiots you describe and that they are ... just. like. you!) Nyaa
Edited: Tue, 06 Oct 2009 18:13:00

___

Listen to Wu-Tang and watch Kung-Fu

The VG Press

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Wed, 07 Oct 2009 14:38:12
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What kind of weird calls do you get at a parking dept?

"Hello, I lost my car. Help me find it?"

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