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You are here: Home / Post / Opinion / Buying rugs and broken broadband connections

Buying rugs and broken broadband connections

October 6, 2011 By Bernie Leave a Comment

There’s something curious happens when you write a number down. It somehow becomes “official”. I realised this a few years ago when haggling for rugs in India. The traders would write down the figure on a piece of paper and show it to you when you were haggling. I naively assumed this was to avoid confusion because of potential language issues, but I realised after a while that many of the traders spoke better English than me. The traders used many subtle (and not-so-subtle) sales techniques that are only now being formally researched and shown to be effective, but this one stuck with me.

A few years later and my cable modem is being fixed (replaced) by a helpful technician from Virgin Broadband. I ask him what it’s like working for Virgin Broadband and he explains how the job is being ruined by his boss’s obsession with beating the 4.2% fault recurrence rate. His boss is demanding a 3.8% rate from all of his technicians. I ask where the target comes from and he explains that he has “no idea” and then goes on to explain that the biggest driver on recurring faults is the type of modem they install – with some models much more likely to fail soon after installation than others. The definition of “recurring” is interesting as well, it’s any issue reported within 7 days of the initial fault, whether related to the initial issue or not.

It seems that two apparently arbitrary targets around recurring faults had become written targets and taken on a level of significance way beyond any justification. They had become “official”.

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Bernie

Bernie has helped his clients deliver surprising levels of improvement across a wide range of industries over the past 15 years. His mission is to help clients with a repeatable, practical and jargon-free method for generating insightful and clear KPIs and management reports. He understands that most people don’t get excited by KPIs, but believes it’s a curable condition.

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Filed Under: Opinion, Post Tagged With: arbritrary, fault rate, targets, written

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