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istg empathy statements were created by a sociopath or a lazy QA manager. They're awkward, they're clunky, they're unnatural, and real people don't talk like that.
So, what's the best way of showing you care and understand the customer?
Fixing their issue, whatever it might be.
Fix it, fix it quick, and fix it right.
Boom. Headshot yo.
But empathy statements?
This is one of those things that sounded like a good idea, and stuck.
Like the SLA of 80/20. Nobody knows why that became the standard, but it's probably because it sounded like the Pareto Principle, and people like to feel smart. That's okay.
here's a link to the LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/caffcx
5
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istg empathy statements were created by a sociopath or a lazy QA manager. They're awkward, they're clunky, they're unnatural, and real people don't talk like that.
So, what's the best way of showing you care and understand the customer?
Fixing their issue, whatever it might be.
Fix it, fix it quick, and fix it right.
Boom. Headshot yo.
But empathy statements?
This is one of those things that sounded like a good idea, and stuck.
Like the SLA of 80/20. Nobody knows why that became the standard, but it's probably because it sounded like the Pareto Principle, and people like to feel smart. That's okay.
here's a link to the LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/caffcx