Why user’s lie

I think Andy’s comment on that last post hints at some of why user’s lie. He says:

but then a reboot WILL cure a lot of problems but doesn’t actually fix the problem as to WHY it happens.

I think a large part of why user’s lie is tied into their expectations. When you work in a large office, certainly you shouldn’t EVER have a problem like a random application hang, or random crash, and if you do, the IT staff should come running immediately to make sure it never happens again. Since the IT staff doesn’t seem to take the same view of the occasional hang, you lie about the severity of it so that they will take it more seriously.

In an ideal world, Windows would never crash, Word or Outlook would never hang up, applications would always give up the memory allocated to them the second you closed it, print drivers would never behave erratically, etc. But technology is not this ideal world. Sometimes all of those tings happen, and so long as it’s not a pattern of behavior, there really isn’t anything your IT staff can do but recommend you reboot to recover from the problem, reset the memory, etc. and move on with your life.

Unfortunately, when confronted with this advice, the other expectation of users comes in to play, and that is they expect (or suspect?) that the IT staff really isn’t interested in helping them. They suspect, and maybe in some cases they might very well have cause, that we recommend a reboot in order to not have to do anything ourselves. I don’t believe that is true very often, but it certainly is the impression out there. So much so that at my last job I actually wrote a “tip of the week” called In Defense of Rebooting, in which I described exactly what happens when Windows develops memory or application problems and why rebooting generally fixes the immediate problem, and does so in a much smaller time frame than trying to figure out exactly why something is hung up. I also explained that a one time hang is nothing unusual on a desktop PC, but that a pattern of them is something I can find another solution for, but that it will take more than one to start to see a pattern. Perhaps I should see if I have that documented somewhere. 🙂

What other expectations do users or IT staff have that get in the way of good helpdesk/users relationships?

Tags: Users, Helpdesk, Expectations

Similar Posts

  • Tech news

    Microsoft has released details on the Office 2003 lineup. Which components are included in which version, etc. Sounds like the Professional Enterprise edition is going to be the most “improved” over earlier versions of Office, what with rights management and XML stuff built in, but the lineup will be changed from the way XP is…

  • Crash course

    So today’s been just as busy as yesterday, had to swap and re-image a hard drive, yet again, put out some fires with the network printer, put together a preliminary expense report for Gnomedex and now I get to spend some time on my latest project. We’re looking into some different options for our T1…

  • Tech chat

    Today was pretty insanely busy at work today, so this post has been “in the works” all day, at least in my head. I took part in the Tech Chat on Kevin’s podcast over the weekend, which was pretty fun. I guess Kevin will have some excerpts during some upcoming podcasts, and I understand there’s…

  • Who’s George?

    Darn it, someone’s been keeping track of my helpdesk tickets and putting them on-line under the pseudonym The Chronicles of George. I need to find out who’s doing that! Seriously though, we had a good time laughing about this at work today, all under the guise of learning how NOT to enter information in the…

One Comment

  1. A major expectation of a user is that they are the only one having a problem and that this is your number one priority. This expectation seems to get worse the higher up the management scale they are (and often the simplicity of the solution or *real* impact is lessened the higher the management scale. Sometimes the problems will range from the caps lock key being on whilst entering the password or windows update prompting them to reboot for (real world) examples……
    the fact that the exchange server might have a serious problem at the time doesn’t really matter – that password must be entered NOW

    Sorry this appears on sysadmin day 😉

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

To respond on your own website, enter the URL of your response which should contain a link to this post's permalink URL. Your response will then appear (possibly after moderation) on this page. Want to update or remove your response? Update or delete your post and re-enter your post's URL again. (Find out more about Webmentions.)