Unhappy Customers
BostonU SysMgr
root%bostonu.csnet at csnet-relay.arpa
Sun Dec 30 02:22:24 AEST 1984
It never ceases to amaze me when someone (predictably)
responds to a pricing/quality/service complaint
"Hey, they're only trying to make buck" which is
usually meant to justify most any outrageous practice
and is usually an indication that this clever person
has great insight and empathy into *business*.
Somehow, I think this outright cynicism started around
the watergate thing (ok, I date myself) the moral
of which was "Hey, they're only trying to make a buck/win"
strongly reinforced by the rapid decline into recent
recessions/scandals/cynicism/apathy/despair-for-moral-values.
Ok, my answer:
Hey, I AM THE *#$%@!! CUSTOMER!!!
And if YOU want my business ya better keep me
happy or I'll find another game even if it's
painful. I got bottom lines too and I can
live w/o any vendor a heck of a lot easier then
they can live without me, the customer.
I started using UNIX cause a) It worked b) it was
reasonably priced for a source license
c) it looked like (in 1976) it was gonna be
an area of real development by a community that saw
the problems a lot like I did. If some of those things
stop being so, I stop being a customer as soon
as a reasonable alternative appears...poof, gone.
And I have enough faith in the good sense of customers
that I won't be the only one gone. And something
will appear to fill the void (nature hates a vacuum,
so does american capitalism.)
Now, I don't mind paying a reasonable price for something,
but what that price is depends on its value to ME NOT
THE PROBLEMS OF THE PEOPLE WHO BUILT IT. Their problem
is to convince me, the customer, it is worth to me
what it costs TO ME, not them.
Personally, I think the free pricing of UNIX
to universities was wonderfully generous.
What AT&T got back was an incredibly highly developed system.
Probably, now as it matures it would not be unreasonable
to adjust pricing but they better not think the world
will magically stand still at SYSV or 4.2bsd, development
continues to be critical.
Notice, AT&T gave it away for free and made a killing
on it...chew on that next time you decide to give in
cause "Hey, they're only trying to make a buck."
My suggestion to AT&T is that they charge some reasonable
price for their source distributions that can be spread
out over time (optionally.) Then, they buy back every
bug fix and augmentation. At standard consulting rates,
of course.
I realize this is a bit frivilous but in fact I am
half serious.
-Barry Shein, Boston University
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