What Are You Doing Right Now
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@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@pmoncho said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
a few of my customers use Email on a daily basis to communicate with us , Not a big deal right?
Well One in particular has decided that's the only way he will communicate with us.I just got an email 30 minutes ago. : ......... "oh and this is an emergency, the entire site is down."
Nope, must not be an emergency. You're emailing me rather than Calling.
Anyone else deal with people like this?
On a daily basis. I've tried to explain 911's require a phone call as I am not constantly in email, at my desk, or have a communication device directly in my hand or driving.
Mostly goes in one ear and out the other, or should I say "eye" for that matter.
Only reason I saw it was because emailed in again.
I called his cell, and got it working. then explained "emails - Not important. Phone call = Important. "
added that to my signature on my email now.. in Quotes.
Ha.That is one way to get the point across. Works for me!
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@EddieJennings said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@brandon220 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Researching laptops. Mine is 6 years old and is struggling. Thinking of going with Fedora or Ubuntu and having a Windows 10 VM for managing Hyper-V, etc. There are too many choices. Looking at Dell and HP. A friend is pushing me towards Lenovo but I don't think I want to take that route.
We manage Hyper-V from Linux, works fine.
What do you use for console access to your VMs from Linux?
Most Hyper-V that we have to manage is from shops that want a GUI always, so there is a GUI on the Hyper-V desktop. So MeshCentral like everything else. Super simple.
The thing about Hyper-V is that the situations that make you choose it over KVM or Xen almost universally cause it to have a GUI locally, too. So no need for Windows for remote access at all.
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@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Nope, must not be an emergency. You're emailing me rather than Calling.
Opposite here, if you don't email, it can't be an emergency, because email gets us the info that we need to deal with an issue faster. It's only really good to call if an email with the necessary details has already been sent since the email is needed for paperwork, clarity, and the ability to automate reaching the right people.
Phone calls are slower and require way more work to make sure things get to the right people.
Business people have been trained for decades that calling first means it's people wanting to talk, email is for criticality.
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@WrCombs to the point where if my phone rings, I glance at my email and if I'm not expecting it, I generally won't pick up - because it can't even be a minor issue if I don't have an email about it and if it wasn't worth emailing the data, it's not worth me wasting my time on a call.
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the difference between "Real IT jobs" and POS Jobs ladies and gents ^^^^
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@pmoncho said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
a few of my customers use Email on a daily basis to communicate with us , Not a big deal right?
Well One in particular has decided that's the only way he will communicate with us.I just got an email 30 minutes ago. : ......... "oh and this is an emergency, the entire site is down."
Nope, must not be an emergency. You're emailing me rather than Calling.
Anyone else deal with people like this?
On a daily basis. I've tried to explain 911's require a phone call as I am not constantly in email, at my desk, or have a communication device directly in my hand or driving.
Mostly goes in one ear and out the other, or should I say "eye" for that matter.
But you always have your phone and it can always ring? For me, and everyone I know, there's so much time that they are not at their desk, and a phone call assumes that the person calling knows that their issue is more important than any other issue that you are already working on.
It's specifically because of the issues you mention that emails always get to me and fast, and calls often do not.
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@pmoncho said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@pmoncho said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
a few of my customers use Email on a daily basis to communicate with us , Not a big deal right?
Well One in particular has decided that's the only way he will communicate with us.I just got an email 30 minutes ago. : ......... "oh and this is an emergency, the entire site is down."
Nope, must not be an emergency. You're emailing me rather than Calling.
Anyone else deal with people like this?
On a daily basis. I've tried to explain 911's require a phone call as I am not constantly in email, at my desk, or have a communication device directly in my hand or driving.
Mostly goes in one ear and out the other, or should I say "eye" for that matter.
Only reason I saw it was because emailed in again.
I called his cell, and got it working. then explained "emails - Not important. Phone call = Important. "
added that to my signature on my email now.. in Quotes.
Ha.That is one way to get the point across. Works for me!
Doesn't this result in lots of calls that would have been way better for you being an email?
Calls interrupt and take lots of time and don't produce a paperwork trail. We won't do work based on calls alone because that's a way to blame IT for decisions made elsewhere. We require everything in writing because that's how we show who requested things, found things, etc.
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@jmoore I tried Asus a few years ago with poor results. Leaning towards Dell at the moment.
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@pmoncho said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@pmoncho said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
a few of my customers use Email on a daily basis to communicate with us , Not a big deal right?
Well One in particular has decided that's the only way he will communicate with us.I just got an email 30 minutes ago. : ......... "oh and this is an emergency, the entire site is down."
Nope, must not be an emergency. You're emailing me rather than Calling.
Anyone else deal with people like this?
On a daily basis. I've tried to explain 911's require a phone call as I am not constantly in email, at my desk, or have a communication device directly in my hand or driving.
Mostly goes in one ear and out the other, or should I say "eye" for that matter.
Only reason I saw it was because emailed in again.
I called his cell, and got it working. then explained "emails - Not important. Phone call = Important. "
added that to my signature on my email now.. in Quotes.
Ha.That is one way to get the point across. Works for me!
Doesn't this result in lots of calls that would have been way better for you being an email?
Calls interrupt and take lots of time and don't produce a paperwork trail. We won't do work based on calls alone because that's a way to blame IT for decisions made elsewhere. We require everything in writing because that's how we show who requested things, found things, etc.
If a site is completely down (for whatever reason it could be, Terminals not working, Credit cards dont work, etc.) and they email me , and don't call - then it's obviously not an emergency.
If you email me , you're understanding that I'm working on other issues. If you're calling me, then You need help Right now -because its a business critical issue.I dont send a text to Emergency Services (police in this example:) when Someones beating the shit out of my car with a baseball bat then call them and tell them to read the text. That's Counter productive. and doesn't get the damn job done, Just takes longer cause then they have to find the text in a pool of thousands, and read it.
Same situation here; You got all your terminals looking for the back office server? You sent me an email 30 minutes ago, and you've lost an estimated 1000 in business because you called me an hour later?
Well I get hundreds if not thousands of emails a day from customers, error reporting, not to mention Being away from the desk, or working on something that I can't just stop and check my email.See the difference here is "right now emergencies" Business critical issues- cant go through an email to just me, it has to come through the help desk because if i"m not at my desk. You're emailing me to fix your site, and I cant check my email- What happens? you're down, lose thousands of dollars because you didn't pick up the phone and call.
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@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
If you email me , you're understanding that I'm working on other issues. If you're calling me, then You need help Right now -because its a business critical issue.
But what if another site is also down and you can't answer, or can't prioritize them but they need to let you know? What if they need to document the information?
What if you aren't available to answer the phone?
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@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
I dont send a text to Emergency Services (police in this example:) when Someones beating the shit out of my car with a baseball bat then call them and tell them to read the text. That's Counter productive. and doesn't get the damn job done, Just takes longer cause then they have to find the text in a pool of thousands, and read it.
That's because they are looking for excuses to not respond. Not because EMAIL, not text, isn't a better mechanism.
Your example shows a type of service that would be an example of one you'd never want to be compared to. Police are not responsible for your car, they don't manage you, they aren't an authenticated admin, etc. Nothing in that situation, including the tools you use or the results you get, are related.
It would not take longer because by your logic, they can't get to your call because it would be in voicemail. If you were treating your email properly, an email would get to you fast. Calls take way longer to process than emails and can't be streamlined.
The cops have to have a call center doing triage because they can even attempt to use calls. You don't have that, either, so again, nothing in that example is relevant.
If you want to call me, you have to go through a call center first. But if you email me, it's immediate and direct.
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
If you email me , you're understanding that I'm working on other issues. If you're calling me, then You need help Right now -because its a business critical issue.
But what if another site is also down and you can't answer, or can't prioritize them but they need to let you know? What if they need to document the information?
What if you aren't available to answer the phone?
Because I dont work alone , and i dont give out my personal number/desk number to all customers.
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I was an idiot and forgot to take my special pain meds last night before bed, so of course I woke up in agony and am paying for it today in lost sleep, hypersensitivity and some awesome burning pain. I think I'll take the Serious Pain killer now. ugh.
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@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Same situation here; You got all your terminals looking for the back office server? You sent me an email 30 minutes ago, and you've lost an estimated 1000 in business because you called me an hour later?
Why aren't you watching your emails, but are sitting by answering your phone and allowing it to interrupt anything tha tyou are doing? That doesn't make sense.
This is like the restaurant where you stand in line and when it is your turn to get help, some yahoo calls and the cashier takes their call first even though you were there and waited in line.
Your system only works because you are intentionally giving phones priority to stop all work you are doing, and ignoring emails. It's you artificially prioritizing a slow, inefficient method creating the requirement. On a technological and more general business level, the opposite is true. If people constantly ignore email and prioritize calls, then suddenly call volume goes way up because people learn that calling gets action and emailing doesn't.
This then makes you less efficient and the customer less efficient.
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@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Well I get hundreds if not thousands of emails a day from customers, error reporting, not to mention Being away from the desk, or working on something that I can't just stop and check my email.
Sure, me too. But you can filter those, right? If they started to become calls, how would you filter out the noise? You can't, you have to answer every call and are stuck dealing with it even if it isn't the highest priority.
How do you triage with direct calls? I know of no way to do it other than hanging up on people and telling them to email.
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@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
See the difference here is "right now emergencies" Business critical issues- cant go through an email to just me, it has to come through the help desk because if i"m not at my desk. You're emailing me to fix your site, and I cant check my email- What happens? you're down, lose thousands of dollars because you didn't pick up the phone and call.
Sure, NOTHING should be "just to you", call or otherwise, because if you aren't at your desk, you get neither. But at least email gets you the info and is waiting for you and has the documentation in place. Phone call still needs all that if you weren't there or were dealing with something else.
There's no time that I can get a call but can't see email; but there are loads of times that I can get email but can't answer the phone (including when already on the phone.)
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@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
What happens? you're down, lose thousands of dollars because you didn't pick up the phone and call.
Only because someone is ignoring them. There's nothing stopping your team from having efficient processes and dealing with the email like normal helpdesks do. We do this all day long for outages. We have the outage documented, the info digested, and someone assigned to look at it before a call would typically get through. Email is fast. You have to ignore it and treat it differently than a call to typically make it slower.
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@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
If you email me , you're understanding that I'm working on other issues. If you're calling me, then You need help Right now -because its a business critical issue.
But what if another site is also down and you can't answer, or can't prioritize them but they need to let you know? What if they need to document the information?
What if you aren't available to answer the phone?
Because I dont work alone , and i dont give out my personal number/desk number to all customers.
So it's a call, but not a call to you? That's how we handle calls, but typically they get turned into emails. Calling is just a slower way of sending the email, because the call center wants it out ASAP, not to have a long discussion or risk getting info transferred incorrectly.
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
What happens? you're down, lose thousands of dollars because you didn't pick up the phone and call.
Only because someone is ignoring them. There's nothing stopping your team from having efficient processes and dealing with the email like normal helpdesks do. We do this all day long for outages. We have the outage documented, the info digested, and someone assigned to look at it before a call would typically get through. Email is fast. You have to ignore it and treat it differently than a call to typically make it slower.
Literally nowhere did I say I was ignoring them, I was working on another non emergency Project, That I could have stopped and helped the customer, Now your just making things up to make a point.
They dont email the Support Line, they email me directly. while I worked on another project that was not an emergency, With no Alert that I got an email.Sure, I filter my emails on a constant basis, still gets full up of Non-Emergency Emails cluttering up the inbox.
You dont work on the front of of customer service so this entire conversation is from 2 completely different perspectives, as I said above. -The difference between real IT work, and POS Customer Support. -
@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@EddieJennings said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@brandon220 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Researching laptops. Mine is 6 years old and is struggling. Thinking of going with Fedora or Ubuntu and having a Windows 10 VM for managing Hyper-V, etc. There are too many choices. Looking at Dell and HP. A friend is pushing me towards Lenovo but I don't think I want to take that route.
We manage Hyper-V from Linux, works fine.
What do you use for console access to your VMs from Linux?
Most Hyper-V that we have to manage is from shops that want a GUI always, so there is a GUI on the Hyper-V desktop. So MeshCentral like everything else. Super simple.
The thing about Hyper-V is that the situations that make you choose it over KVM or Xen almost universally cause it to have a GUI locally, too. So no need for Windows for remote access at all.
So you don't (possibly can't) have console-level access to the VMs from your Linux machine. You're using MeshCentral or some other remote access tool to get to the VMs when you need a GUI.