The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: Why it pays to be kind(nevertryneverfail.com) |
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: Why it pays to be kind(nevertryneverfail.com) |
The fact that a full half of the people who bothered to respond were so offended by your actions that they took the time to swear at you might be a clue that spamming your customers is not a good way to generate positive feedback.
I recently bought tickets from Ticketmaster and stupidly gave them my real email address instead of my spam email, thinking perhaps they would send something I would need to get my tickets. I think I had to unsubscribe from five separate lists to get them to stop sending me garbage.
> I wish that they’d just click the “Unsubscribe” link in the email, since that’s what it’s there for after all
Tell you what, every day you send a spam bomb, spend 2 minutes staring at the wall for each and every person that clicks the Unsubscribe link. Then you'll have some understanding of how much time you are wasting for your potential (now probably ex-) customers. I mean, that's what the wall is there for after all.
In short, fuck spammers.
I used to get mad about unwanted e-mails too. I used to keep a separate e-mail to sign up for websites because of all the crap they sent me.
Turns out, its actually really fucking easy to get around this. I just went through my recent unread e-mails and hit the unsubscribe button. At most it takes 5 seconds per list.
Now I use my real e-mail for my real sites and I only get e-mails that I want.
This "Stare at a wall for 2 minutes for every person who you had the balls to send an e-mail to" reeks of the kind of whiny first-world entitlement that I'm beginning to associate with the color orange.
I don't find it a huge burden to zap unwanted mail. That said, this unwanted mail does nothing to improve my notions of the senders.
I'd be annoyed. I wouldn't respond harshly, but I'd be annoyed.
It probably works to 'convert' people, though, so more power to them.
"Please stop emailing me" is "rudeness"?
Seriously, is this for real?
And the reason the email "gets" to you is because you might be in a bad mood, you might not love to wake up to a pile of not-so-nice emails, you cat scratched your favorite sandals today, etc, but in the end the author's point is precisely that maybe the other side of the communication channel is having issues of its own as well, and thus responding very poorly to the situation ("stop sending what I consider spam but you consider business"), i.e. when he says "give people the benefit of the doubt and respond with kindness and empathy regardless of the way other people are interacting in the situation"
"Experience is something that we get right after we needed it most"
People can experience all kinds of things, acts of kindness, cruelty, logic, and compassion are some of them. As you gain experience your world begins to be colored by it. In that vein cruel person will see cruelty in others and seek violent solutions first because in his experience that is what works.
Of course nothing is absolute, thus above should not be taken out of context of random philosophical musing.