Saturday, January 17, 2026

DO YOU HAVE TWO MINUTES?



HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Happy Saturday, everyone!


Here’s the question of the day. Why does every transaction have to have some sort of survey after it? Why does everything we do or buy suddenly require some sort of a review?

After you talk to a real person on the phone, (imagine that happening :-)) they say "would you have time to take a survey after we finish?" "Would you have time to stay on the phone and answer a few quick questions?" "Would you have time to help us with our customer support by taking a brief survey?"

I’ll tell you how I feel about taking a brief survey! Grr.

I would be much happier with the customer service if the customer service person didn’t ask me to tell about my customer service! I barely have time to tell the person about whatever it was, let alone answer take the time to some questions about how I liked telling the person about whatever it was.

Usually I’m annoyed enough having to call whoever it is to talk about whatever it was in the first place, and I certainly am not in the mood to tell you what a good job you did taking care of the thing that didn’t work in the first place.
On the other hand.

It’s not the customer service person's fault that their bosses require them to have people answer a survey.

And I will confess to you that I have asked people in the past whether those surveys make any difference--and I am told they absolutely do.

So now I am guilted into answering every single one of them, because I feel personally responsible for the employment of the people whose performance I am reviewing. I always answer them all. To make sure the people keep their jobs.

The post office, too, asks me to take a survey at the end of each transaction. First by tapping a little green smiley face on the credit card reader, and then by scanning my receipt on my phone and going to the survey via the QR code and then filling out stuff.

Now, I love my post office people! They are fabulous! And I asked them, specifically, whether filling out those forms and tapping the little green face makes a difference, and they unanimously said they did! They said post offices get closed if people don’t respond to those surveys.

So here’s where, you know me, I got worried and involved. I pointed out to them that there was no signage in the post office indicating how important those surveys were, and that it was too easy to skip them, and that they should make it clear to other customers how much difference it makes.

And, so hilarious, the next time I went into the post office there were signs up all over the place reminding people to do the survey. (I am laughing even as I type this because what a busybody I am. But hey, if it makes a difference why not?)

And then, the companies get you, too, on the phone surveys, because they’ll change the rules mid-survey. Right?

Like questions one through five will be "on a scale of one to 10 with the 1 being the highest, how satisfied are you with whatever it is." So I start tapping one, one, one, to get out of it, and then suddenly they change the question: "Now, on a scale of one to five, with five being the highest, how do you feel about whatever it is?"

So I have to completely turn my brain around. And I feel even guiltier, because what if I make a mistake and ruin someone's life? It's a TEST!

Oh my gosh, Reds and readers, do you answer those surveys? What do you think about them?

2 comments:

  1. Those surveys are often frustrating, but I do them because it only takes a minute or two and I'm grateful enough to have actually talked to a real person that I'm happy to give them what feels like the equivalent of a smiley face . . . . .

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  2. I don't mind giving feedback if an employee has worked to solve a problem for me. But lately every purchase I make seems to come with attached survey. Last week I stopped at the drug store for a tube of toothpaste. When I got home, I found an email survey waiting: "Tell us about your experience!"

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