> -----Original Message-----
> From: Faisal Imtiaz 
> Sent: Saturday, March 03, 2012 7:58 AM
> To: nanog@nanog.org
> Subject: Re: which one a Technical Support or Help Desk
> 
> 
> > Especially if a human answers promptly without a horrible accent...
> >
> > Jeff
> Like a heavy Southern Drawl ?
> 
> :)
> 
> Hope you realize that this list a Global list, and not everyone is
> talking about "US Only".

Well, it is a North American list.  A "heavy Southern drawl" is perfectly fine 
in the Southeastern US, and might even be welcome by customers there.  It's no 
worse than a thick New England accent.  But there are plenty of places, 
particularly in the mountain West of the US, where such help is relatively 
inexpensive and the accent is neutral.  A call center in 
Montana/Utah/Wyoming/Idaho or even the Dakotas/Nebraska/Kansas for a national 
player isn't a bad idea. Help is relatively inexpensive, the people can be 
understood nationally, and in Central or Mountain timezone give you decent 
national coverage without a bunch of overtime.  The help center doesn't have to 
be physically located with your actual network operations infrastructure.  In 
fact, there are good reasons why you don't want that.  If your operations have 
experienced a catastrophic failure (power outage, lightning strike, cable cut), 
your customers could still reach a real live person.  But having customer reps 
that speak in the same "accent" as the customers they are serving can be a nice 
touch, too.  If most of your customers are in the Southeastern or Northeastern 
US, maybe you WANT reps that sound like your customers.



Reply via email to