I, like most of us, am pretty used to bad customer service. I mean the number of times I've been delighted is much less than the amount of times I've walked away frustrated by the lack of caring.
But I was pleasantly surprised by VW of America. They had sent me a recall a month or so ago for a fuel line issue. Now I wasn't really annoyed or even phased by this. Every one has recalls and I knew I'd just schedule time to get it done. No big deal.
But VW did something that really shows great customer service, they actually sent a $50 gift card to their customers to make up for the inconvenience. In it they apologize for the problem, re-iterate their desire to avoid repeating the problem in the future, and for the paranoid in all of us, explain there are no strings attached.
We all make mistakes, but great companies not only fix them and apologize for them, but make it right for the customers, Great job VW!
Sunday, January 8, 2012
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
Employee privacy and corporate liability...
I just read this blog post from
http://bringyourownit.com/2011/12/19/consumerization-101-employee-privacy-vs-corporate-liability-2/
It's a great, thought provoking post. Here's my take on it, for what it's worth. Also thanks to my friend Mark Townsend for pointing me to the blog. Lots of great stuff.
If you are too lazy to read the above, basically a company wiped a users iphone that was connected to the corporate email system. She had signed an acceptable use policy but it had a picture of her son that had just passed away from cancer. She sued and collected 5M...
Cesare asked about that, as well as the company's right to track location and what the company should do about questionable content...
We tell people if they want to use their personal device to get their corporate email. that they need to be aware that we have the right to wipe. if you don't like it, we will get you a corporate device.... but... not sure that this will protect us since in this case, she had signed an AUP, which I assume had the same sort of language in it that we use in ours. Which basically says, if you connect it to us you give us the right to wipe all data off of it.
@CesareGarlati
It's a great, thought provoking post. Here's my take on it, for what it's worth. Also thanks to my friend Mark Townsend for pointing me to the blog. Lots of great stuff.
If you are too lazy to read the above, basically a company wiped a users iphone that was connected to the corporate email system. She had signed an acceptable use policy but it had a picture of her son that had just passed away from cancer. She sued and collected 5M...
Cesare asked about that, as well as the company's right to track location and what the company should do about questionable content...
We tell people if they want to use their personal device to get their corporate email. that they need to be aware that we have the right to wipe. if you don't like it, we will get you a corporate device.... but... not sure that this will protect us since in this case, she had signed an AUP, which I assume had the same sort of language in it that we use in ours. Which basically says, if you connect it to us you give us the right to wipe all data off of it.
Now I feel bad about it, but if she had lost the photo because she dropped the iphone would she have sued apple? Would the building owner be responsible for having too hard of a floor? Would the flooring people be responsible? At some point people need to be responsible for backing up data that they want to keep. I mean she had the picture for a few weeks...
Regarding tracking location. If you don't want the company to do that, don't use it to connect to corporate, turn it off, or leave it on your desk. After all we aren't tracking the user, we are tracking a device that is accessing corporate resources. Is that much different than tracking IP's on a website? Other than the granularity I would say no...
As far as accessing questionable websites while at work. I would say if it was done using the corporate LAN (or WLAN) the company has the right to monitor. If on your personal cell phone plan then no. My network, my rules. IMHO
The trickier piece is if we let you bring your device to work and it already has questionably, or even illegal content on it (piracy, inappropriate etc) is the company liable? Do we have the right or obligation to report it if we see it? We had a case many years ago where a field guy sent his laptop in for repair and it had illegal files on it. Our policy was not to look. but if we saw something illegal to report it. Clear enough if it is a company owned machine, but if it's not what should we do??? I mean if someone has a bag of pot in their car in our parking lot are we liable?
Tricky issues and while I think my answers make sense, that doesn't mean the law will agree. I would not want to be the test case...
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