The current consensus on Meta seems to be that:
But I was referred here by [company] for support!
Yes. For your on-topic, programming-related questions. For your
questions having specifically to do with writing code for their API.
For questions that involve customer service issues, you need to
contact the company directly.
If the referring company did not give you clear guidance as to what
types of questions would be a good fit for Stack Overflow, contact the
community team and let them know; they might be able to reach out to
the company and help them establish better guidance to avoid confusion
for everyone.
That being said, I do not think that's sufficient. New users coming from company pages are going to be interested in getting quick solutions, they're not going to want to take the trouble that may, or may not, fix the underlying problem one or two months down the road.
The best guidelines I found for companies so far are here:
Is it acceptable to use Stack Overflow as a Q&A for a specific product?
And as far as I can tell out of all the guidelines in the linked post above, it seems that Square doesn't seem to know about the following subset of guidelines:
Make sure we're not your only support option
This is an important one. In fact, I would amend the rule to say:
Make sure we're not your primary support option to ask new questions
Because while Square does list one other lesser support option on its page. If you click on "How can I receive answers to technical implementation questions?". StackOverflow is listed as the first option you should use to both read previous answers (which is fine), but also ask new questions for api-related questions (if not already listed).
Point bug reports and feature requests at bug trackers that you
maintain (not for the site)
Currently, this is the only second option Square has:
How can I provide feedback or feature requests for the Connect API?
Please contact support via email with your feedback or feature
request.
So not only, it lists StackOverflow as its primary support option to ask new questions, but it also doesn't specify a different place for submitting bug reports, and if you actually click on that link (which at first, I hoped was an email address, but is actually not), it takes you to a generic page for general customer support (where you can call a number, or email someone).
Obviously here, the first person you're going to reach is not going to be someone in QA or someone on the developer team, it's going to be a non-technical customer service person who may, or may not, even work directly for Square (but who may work out of some outsourced call center in Kansas or something).
Furthermore, Square has many millions of users, so it also means that if you contact them that way, the turnaround time may be super high simply because it's very hard to manage a customer service center that can handle hundreds of customer requests each day.
Make sure their question is on topic and not something we'd prefer
folks not ask
Currently, Square doesn't do that.
It tells you what tag to use, but doesn't mention any of our rules.
Make it clear that Stack Overflow is a community run Q&A site for
programmers, and not a part of your organization. It's important to
set people's expectations correctly when you send them over to us.
Square doesn't do any of that either. Following that advice would help a lot.
Now coming back to another astute comment from sjagr.
I did notice that one user was consistently answering these questions,
and appears to be employed by Square. The answers he posted weren't
really answers, but full of helpdesk language (e.g. "we do/do not
support this feature").
I agree that boiler plate cut and paste help desk language is not something that we should encourage on StackOverflow. On one hand, I think that clearer language upstream would solve some of those issues. But on the other hand, I think we should encourage employee posters to avoid giving boiler plate responses from the perspective of the company only, and really go into why they won't really answer a question because the question is too broad (or because it's a duplicate, or whatever) in addition to whatever else they were going to say.
And yes, employee experts may not have enough rep to close a question. On one hand, that can easily be resolved by suggesting to companies that they only hire people with the required rep in the first place. But on the other hand, not having enough rep is not really a problem since they could just post a thoughtful comment instead (that someone else with enough rep could act on).
Now I realize that the team at StackOverflow would like to contact Square, and possibly offer them some kind of partnership (which is a good idea), where Square could rectify these issues, but also kick back a few dollars back to StackOverflow for the trouble (this is just my assumption of course, but it would be really bad if they didn't treat this problem as a potential opportunity for new partnerships and new revenue streams).
So while I agree with that approach, it's just that I don't think that approach is going to be fast enough, nor do I think that this approach will scale well enough in the long-run.
I believe that StackOverflow should post some clearer guidelines for companies that use StackOverflow in that way, and that it should collect direct employee contact information for the employees in charge of that part of their web site (they can list that requirement as part of the clearer guidelines SO publishes).
This way, SO could contact those people if those guidelines ever get updated (as undoubtedly, they will), and they could also contact them to see if they might be interested in some kind of partnership (or some kind of additional service SO could provide).
Also, I believe it should ask the companies linking to StackOverflow to give them a link to the page(s) they're linking from (with some kind of automated test, or manual checking of those pages containing those links)
In addition to that, I think that StackOverflow should provide companies some sort of web analytics for the traffic that comes from their particular site, or that uses a particular company api-related tag. This could serve as an incentive for them to keep their link and contact information up-to-date and perhaps it could help them optimize their FAQ.
And for the companies that don't comply, or that take too long to even reply, a large warning message could be placed on top of every page that comes from a particular referrer (or lacking a referrer -- those pages that are tagged with a particular api-related tag). This last suggestion would be an effective way to grab the attention of the company in question (while at the same time, providing some of the missing instructions/disclaimers to the new user who followed their link here).