Sociologist. Criminologist. Seeking a cool forum in which to share some of my observations about American society, current events, and life at the edge of a BladeRunningMan-Realized turn in American social relations with a wider audience.
Minute-by-Miinute Diary of an Hour in the Life Waiting in an Automated Phone Queue
Published on February 10, 2005 By Professor Sue In Humor
Ok, what better time to rant than RIGHT NOW while I'm sitting IN a phone queue...is there a worse misery of modern technology? Let's consider the components that make this such a supremely irritating experience:

(1) You get a fembot telling you how important your call is. You know SHE'S LYING, though, b/c, of course, if your call was THAT important, the company would hire more PEOPLE to answer the phones. Hell, they don't even phone you anymore-- they use automoated computers to do that, so you can't even answer the phone and tell them to BLANK OFF! You don't get the same thrill telling that to a computer!! My favorite comment my dad ever made to a telemarketer who called during dinner (this was years back-- in the times of rotary phones and family dinners). The guy was selling exercise equipment or something and my dad said, with a completely straight face, that "he was sorry but he has no legs." HA!!

(2) You get 70s music. Where do they find this music?? And it's ALWAYS way loud.

(3) This provides a friendly reminder (as does the crink forming in your neck) that you should really get a speaker phone.

(4) The fembot KEEPS telling you to please stay on the line (believe me, if I could get off, I WOULD!!) because your call is SOOO very important to "us"-- as if the $2/hour Indian guy is really part of the company. You can rest assured that the last English voice you're going to hear in this whole call is the automated fembot. She probably got paid $20 to make the recording-- but she only earned that once...is there such a thing as a "voice model"? There are hand models-- why not voice models?

(5) After hearing for the 50th time that your call is so important, you might begin feeling special to know how important your call (and maybe by extension you) is (and I'm calling a collections dept.-- you really would think the call might ACTUALLY be important to them). Soon, though, unless you're really hard up for human interaction, you realize that the "next available agent" likely refers to one guy sitting in front of a phone with a LOT of blinky lights. You hope he's not like Homer Simpson and easily distracted by all the pretty lights...or maybe gone off to get a donut. He may well have fallen asleep...what time is it in India right now, anyway?? Oh god, the guy probably really IS asleep...

(6) You keep holding, though..."Thank you for waiting. We apologize for this delay as your call is VERY important to us. Please stay on the line and your call WILL be answered by the next available agent." Is it bad that I now KNOW BY HEART the whole "line"?? BONUS: You'll probably be on hold again in your dreams when you get to sleep tonight...

(7) Why don't I hang up?? I REALLY want to, but then I'd have to go through all of this again later. It's one of those time invested bargains. You don't want to hang up b/c you know you'll be the very next call picked up if you do. Like the Seinfeld Chinese restaurant episode. Man, my neck REALLY hurts now. Can I sue them for pain & suffering??

Oh my god-- I finally got an answer and it really IS an Indian guy!!! Unbelievable! God I love this country. Why the hell are we spending so much on homeland defense anyway? We send our jobs overseas so that we can spell our name 12 times to a guy in India regarding a bill for something we bought down the street. We're cutting our education budgets to ENSURE that our kids will definitely not be able to compete with India & China. Maybe they can guard a prison or something. What the hell is this homeland office defending anyway? It's like the Defense of Marriage Ammendment (DOMA, pronounced DUMB-A). What the heck is that defending??? Brittney Spears' right to get married and divorced in 55 hours? A 50% divorce rate? Woo-hoo!

By the way, of course, the Indian guy tells me that, after waiting 25 minutes, I've called the wrong number. He sent me on some run-around. See, the reason the payment is late is b/c Old Navy had my address wrong. Now that the account has gone to collections, of course, I can't make a payment over the phone w/Old Navy, though I can send them a payment in the mail. As the man on the phone (I think) said: Of course vee vill accept it (the payment). Of course, though, they can't (won't) actually settle the late charges issue (why should I have to send late charges when they're using the WRONG address??) until after I've sent payment to them, After they receive the payment, they can then remove the late charges. What, they'll REFUND the late charges to me?? Yeah, right.

You know, I vaguely remember this purchase from Old Navy-- a few months ago. The most vivid memory of the whole thing was that they couldn't even give me two bags. I asked for a large paper shopping bag, which they gave me-- but only after I returned the plastic bag they'd previously given me. I guess I'll be relegating Old Navy and their cheap crap to the ever-lengthening list of places where I won't spend my hard-earned money. I'm going to have to start making my own cloths and growing my own food before too long. I do have to say, though: as I get older, I'm a LOT less willing to pay less to get less, which is how most "bargains" inevitably turn out. Like Wal-Mart. Yeah, buy it once, wear it once, pay for it 10 times. Nowadays, I happily pay more so that I can get better service and decent quality. And I'm HAPPY to do it!

By the way: I have no gripe at all with India or the Indian people. They are hard-working and doing the right things to develop their country. My gripe is that our country's leadership and our business climate is not doing the same to ensure that America is a good place to live and work. I'm highly educated and quite skilled and I, like many of my friends and colleagues, am starting to think very seriously about moving to Canada or Europe-- maybe even to India. /rant/

Comments
on Feb 10, 2005
yep I been on this rant many times.. phone fembot rants, dmv rants where I wind up screaming "does anyone here speak english?" signs in 14 different languages..on and on.. I feel your pain.. smile
on Feb 11, 2005
Nice Rant. The worse part is that you don't even have to call them first. I get calls every so often where the fembots tell me to "Please hold on. We have a very important message for you but all our operators are busy." Why are they calling me if they are too busy?
on Feb 11, 2005
Interesting worldview: "fembots", "and it's an Indian!" all these in context seem discriminatory to me.
on Feb 11, 2005
Thing is that 9 times out of 10, the recorded voice, i.e. the bot, is a female. I guess that's designed to keep people calm...? "It's an Indian!" was simply a matter of description: it was an Indian (as in someone from India, rather than someone misnamed by Columbus and co. when they thought they'd landed in the Near East). Really, it was. I guess I could say it was an "Indian man," but I'm not sure how to denote "someone from India" other than to say "Indian." That the person who came on-line only confirmed my prejudicial guess as to where he might be from only confirms my point. As I explained at the end of said rant, I have no qualms with the Indian people seeking better work that the multinationals will happily field out; my problem is with the multinationals and the interlocking directorates of power here in the US that allow them to thrive to our loss. Even having some jobs leave the US is not innately a problem, assuming our govt. weren't CUTTING our education budget and thereby ensuring the continued marginalization of most Americans. India has been investing in education, and it has a lot of well-educated folks who are willing/able to work for much less than folks here in the US can/will.

All that said, if one is to speak of the existing world order, one must inevitably appropriate terms that, no matter how neutral or non-neutral, will incorporate a subtext of power. See Habermas for more info on this. It's unavoidable-- one can aspire to be PC in one's speaking, and after years in academe, I've been so trained. However, one must categorize in some way to say anything of comment on social relations-- if one maintains a completely neutral approach (even if that were possible), one is unable to say anything. I tend to play w/words like "fembot" to underline a particular perspective-- I like the malleability of language. And I understand/accept the fact that such appropriations necessarily incorporate power dynamics. Hope that clarifies a bit.
on Feb 11, 2005
I once called London Transport to ask if Tower Bridge was in zone 1 or zone 2 for the Underground. He replied he did not know as his map was unclear. "You know". I replied, "It spans the the river from the Tower". "Sorry", he said I can't tell from my map and I've never been to London." Where are you then?" I stupidly asked him. "Karachi!" he replied. IT'S is a worldwide problem believe me.
on Feb 11, 2005
HAHA! You know what I hate more than this? When I get a call and then I'm told by a recording to please stay on the line for an important message from (insert name of any telespamming company here). I hate those calls. They can't even have people there to answer the calls they are placing? Idiots!
on Feb 11, 2005
Oh, English Peter, that's VERY funny! London Transport Help from Karachi. Yeah, that makes sense.
on Feb 11, 2005
I just ranted about this last week...outsourcing to India seems to be an en vogue thing to do, and it sucks. It's bad enough being in a constant holding pattern on the phone, but to be put through to someone who can't understand what youre trying to tell them...very frustrating.