Please Don't Buy Anything From Me
by Tim Knox
Published on this site: February 24th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month

This has been an interesting week. My company has thousands
of customers around the world, so my team and I are used to
dealing with customer support issues and do everything possible
to make sure every customer gets exactly what they paid for.
And 99.999% of the time our customers are extremely happy.
Then there is that other .001%...
This week I had one customer threaten to hunt be down and
shoot me like a dog.
Another said that if she could get her hands around my neck
she'd strangle the life out of me.
And still another sincerely hoped that I "burn in Hell
for all eternity."
What did I do to deserve these threats?
Nothing. Absolutely nothing.
Why then are these people who I assume are otherwise nice,
normal human beings wishing me such ill will?
Here's the full story...
It's because they ordered something from one of my websites
and they did not receive the confirmation email in a timely
manner.
That's it. An email didn't reach their inbox.
And being human, which is the most suspicious and non-trusting
species on the planet, these wonderful folks decided that
since they didn't receive the email as quickly as they felt
they should, I was a scammer out to steal their money and
that I should be shot, strangled, and condemned to Hell for
all eternity.
All because they didn't receive an email.
And was it my fault that they didn't receive the email?
Nope, not at all. My entire system is automated and works
like a charm.
Did they take the time to logically think about the possible
reasons that the email was not received?
Did it ever occur to them that the blame might lie in their
own email filters or their ISP's filters?
Did it ever cross their mind that the email might just be
sitting in their spam folder (as was the case in each of these
examples)?
Nope, instead they decided - within Minutes of clicking
the buy button - that your old buddy, Tim, was the spawn of
Satan and a scam artist just out to steal their money.
And do you think it ever occurred to these good, decent folks
to click the customer service email link that is clearly shown
on their sales receipt to request that their information be
sent again?
Nope and nope again. That would have made too much sense.
Do you think they took the time to read the long explanation
on the sales receipt and the order "thanks page"
that explains that sometimes email filters block delivery
of download emails and they should contact customer service
if they have a problem?
Nope,nope, and nope.
Instead, they somehow found my personal email address and
started sending me death threats.
Let me tell you, nothing warms the cockles of your heart
(did you know your heart had cockles?) like receiving an email
from a customer who actually has the word "God"
in their email address who hopes that you burn in he-double
hockey sticks because he didn't receive an email with his
order information.
So this leads me back to the beginning of my story.
Please Don't Buy Anything From Me...
At least until you read the rest of the story...
First, let me explain the mechanics of online ordering.
When you come to one of my websites and click a button to
purchase a product, here's what happens.
My website adds the product to a shopping cart. When you
click to proceed you either pay by credit card or are taken
to Paypal, where you can log in to an existing Paypal account
or set up a new account. On the last page of the checkout
process there is a button labeled "CONTINUE." When
you click the continue button you are taken back to my website to the product
download page. The credit card processor or Paypal transmits
a signal back to my system that lets me know that you made
a purchase.
My system displays the link to your order information on
the download page and at the same time sends your order information
to the email address you used to place the order. The entire
process is instantaneous and automated.
And it works extremely well. At least on my end.
It is when my system attempts to deliver the email to the
customer's email address that problems sometime occur.
It's estimated that only about 25% of emails get past ISP
spam filters now.
Especially if the recipient uses a free email system like
Hotmail, Yahoo, Gmail, and MSN.
And many ISPs, namely AOL, Comcast, Cox, Earthlink, and Juno,
just to name a few, also heavily filter their user's emails
without the user ever knowing it.
Of the 25% that the ISP actually lets through, the user's
email program filters out another 3/4 of those.
So every now and then an email sent by my system does not
end up in the customer's inbox, but gets blocked by the ISP
or filtered by the user's email program to a junk or spam
folder.
And when that happens most customers are sane and polite
and simply request that their information be sent again, which
we are more than happy to do.
Then again, some customers immediately think that they have
been scammed and that i should be put to death.
People. Gotta love 'em...
So the next time you buy something from me or any other reputable
online vendor and the email doesn't hit your inbox as quickly
as you think it should, instead of pulling out the torches
and pitchforks and screaming for blood, check your spam
folder to see if the information is there.
If it is, problem solved. Put your pitchfork away.
If it isn't, don't blow your top and start sending death
threats.
Just politely ask that it be sent again.
Email is an imperfect medium.
Remember that the next time you threaten to shoot,
strangle, or condemn to Hell someone who has done you no wrong.

Tim Knox Entrepreneur, Author, Speaker
http://www.prosperityandprofit.com
http://www.dropshipwholesale.net
http://www.smallbusinessqa.com
http://www.timknox.com

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