Anita Taylor gave a pretty detailed response about what happened, while she was busy working backwards to put guard rails in place for instances where we might consider extrinsic incentives again. And we should be able to offer those incentives, because they're fun, and responsible people can have nice things.
When you respond like Anita did (and I have done this a gazillion times), you have to come out and say the awfulness, my gosh, I'm sorry for all of it and start working backwards as soon as you realize you have a cascading mistake.
And when you do that, you'll inadvertently appear to have glossed over what's really important to a group of upset people who are struggling to tell you stuff. Anita understood what was wrong, she said it here:
We are reviewing our policies and will be training the product managers, marketing staff and researchers who typically provide compensation to users on how to avoid issues like this in the future.
She is a being of energy and operates on multiple planes at once. She was already fixing the crux of what was making everyone so mad, it just didn't come out enough. If she had just shared the notes she wrote internally, it would have been a totally different story.
We screwed up the most in setting expectations.
Why? Because we didn't really know how fulfillment was going to work. That didn't call a screeching halt to things because we have a clear business case for offering the cards, provisions in our privacy policy for sharing information for strictly fulfillment purposes, and the third-party had an agreeable set of terms on their side, so it fit. Okay, great, from the user's view this won't be an inconvenience, let's make sure that goes out soon. Are you starting to see how it happened, now, and how it took a minute for us to realize what was getting everyone upset?
But all of that above doesn't mean squat to someone that gave you their information and expected you to email them some digits, or possibly follow up to ask for shipping info to send a physical card. We needed to tell people that things changed and give them the option again, because that's what they expected we'd do. And at the end of the day, that's the only reason that we really care about, because the whole thing was an effort to build goodwill. But it got out of hand because we couldn't slam on the brakes and communicate introspectively fast enough.
When good-faith comes into question, things get dreary.
A simple "Hey, we can't manually fulfill these gift card things, can we give your details to Amazon or do you want a shirt or something instead?" is what people wanted from us in this situation. And that's what they'll get from us in the future. What we thought they wanted was not another email from us about it after helping us so much.
When what they got wasn't that, questioning everything started looking like a good idea to some, and maybe rightfully so given the precedent that some big companies set with how they treat user data. By the time we started getting the right message out, everyone was shouting and we went right into the weeds.
So, what do we do?
Not do what we did. I'm serious.
It seems like it should have been such an easy mistake to have averted and the good news is, it is easy to avert, because now we know. Also, washing a spoon cup-side-up under any significant water pressure is also a bad idea (even if that grime comes off!), you find these things out along the way.
It was a big deal because we weren't clear enough what the 'that' in we'll never do that again actually meant.
And we're sorry about that.