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Peter Mortensen
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I think it would be helpful (for increasing quality) if the speed of Question->Comment->Comment->..Answer->Comment.. would be decreased by the process itself.

Now it is not uncommon that a question gets answered within seconds or minutes, just because it pops up somewhere. StackOverflowStack Overflow users probably know this. They can get a good answer very quickly for free.

At the times of mail chess both parties had to think about their next move. SameThe same was true with snail mail. Both parties had a time to think (days) before the next move. Some letters from that time went into the history.

It is the same with customer support (or helpdesk) service. Customer files in a ticket. Helpdesk has few hours to give first feedback, negotiate the problem and then a timeline is agreed, like - this is a low priority bug (no big damage) we will get you the fix within a month. Within that time the customer can add some more details, put some pressure, request temporary workaround, etc.

I'm new to the community. DidI did not ask any questions myself, and I'm used to solve problems on my own by research, etc. Just my first feelings.

Slow down. Force both parties (Question/Comment/Answer) to take breath and think instead of tweeting.

I think it would be helpful (for increasing quality) if the speed of Question->Comment->Comment->..Answer->Comment.. would be decreased by the process itself.

Now it is not uncommon that a question gets answered within seconds or minutes, just because it pops up somewhere. StackOverflow users probably know this. They can get good answer very quickly for free.

At the times of mail chess both parties had to think about their next move. Same was true with snail mail. Both parties had a time to think (days) before the next move. Some letters from that time went into the history

It is the same with customer support (or helpdesk) service. Customer files in a ticket. Helpdesk has few hours to give first feedback, negotiate the problem and then a timeline is agreed, like - this is a low priority bug (no big damage) we will get you the fix within a month. Within that time customer can add some more details, put some pressure, request temporary workaround etc.

I'm new to the community. Did not ask any questions myself and I'm used to solve problems on my own by research etc. Just my first feelings.

Slow down. Force both parties (Question/Comment/Answer) to take breath and think instead of tweeting

I think it would be helpful (for increasing quality) if the speed of Question->Comment->Comment->..Answer->Comment.. would be decreased by the process itself.

Now it is not uncommon that a question gets answered within seconds or minutes, just because it pops up somewhere. Stack Overflow users probably know this. They can get a good answer very quickly for free.

At the times of mail chess both parties had to think about their next move. The same was true with snail mail. Both parties had a time to think (days) before the next move. Some letters from that time went into the history.

It is the same with customer support (or helpdesk) service. Customer files in a ticket. Helpdesk has few hours to give first feedback, negotiate the problem and then a timeline is agreed, like - this is a low priority bug (no big damage) we will get you the fix within a month. Within that time the customer can add some more details, put some pressure, request temporary workaround, etc.

I'm new to the community. I did not ask any questions myself, and I'm used to solve problems on my own by research, etc. Just my first feelings.

Slow down. Force both parties (Question/Comment/Answer) to take breath and think instead of tweeting.

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xmojmr
  • 8.1k
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I think it would be helpful (for increasing quality) if the speed of Question->Comment->Comment->..Answer->Comment.. would be decreased by the process itself.

Now it is not uncommon that a question gets answered within seconds or minutes, just because it pops up somewhere. StackOverflow users probably know this. They can get good answer very quickly for free.

At the times of mail chess both parties had to think about their next move. Same was true with snail mail. Both parties had a time to think (days) before the next move. Some letters from that time went into the history

It is the same with customer support (or helpdesk) service. Customer files in a ticket. Helpdesk has few hours to give first feedback, negotiate the problem and then a timeline is agreed, like - this is a low priority bug (no big damage) we will get you the fix within a month. Within that time customer can add some more details, put some pressure, request temporary workaround etc.

I'm new to the community. Did not ask any questions myself and I'm used to solve problems on my own by research etc. Just my first feelings.

Slow down. Force both parties (Question/Comment/Answer) to take breath and think instead of tweeting