I know I am the wrong generation.
And I know I have a low
threshhold for bullshit. You probably would too if you grew up during Vietnam
and Richard Nixon’s presidency.
My training was always
to question everything. Especially language.
Language is too important
not to be scrutinized.
Sure, the movie is 100
minutes long. But that’s a lot less time than it would take to read Klemperer’s
seminal LTI (Lingua Tertii Imperii) The Language of the Third Reich.
And, if nothing else, it
will force you to listen to the news, read the paper, agency memos and other
oftentimes manipulative documents with more than a soupcon of cynicism.
About every 90 seconds
or so I read something somewhere about a company, or a software, or an app, or
a procedure, or a survey, or a complementary half-ounce of pretzels on a flight
to an airport that was last remodelled when Eisenhower was president, seeking
to “improve the customer experience.”
I don’t know about you,
I haven’t had a good customer experience from any company with an aggregate of
over 500 employees in pretty much my whole life.
Even Apple is more
interested in altering the configuration of its cords and connectors than in improving
their customer experience.
ME:
Do you have a Apple Watch charger with a USB-C connector?
Do you have a Apple Watch charger with a USB-C connector?
APPLE:
No. You can buy an adaptor.
No. You can buy an adaptor.
ME:
So I can’t charge my new phone with my new computer unless I use an adaptor.
So I can’t charge my new phone with my new computer unless I use an adaptor.
APPLE:
Sorry.
Sorry.
-
ME:
I got a bill under my door last night.
I got a bill under my door last night.
MARRIOTT:
We show you checking out today.
We show you checking out today.
ME:
I made a reservation for
three nights.
MARRIOTT:
Sorry. Come down and get
your keys reactivated.
-
My personal belief is
that companies (or agencies) that seek to “improve the customer experience" aren’t necessarily
lying—but they aren’t, either, telling the whole truth. I think what they
should be saying is “we seek to improve the customer experience without cutting
into our profits or spending more money serving customers.”
Or as the robber barons (past and current) might have put it, "we care about our workers. But not enough to pay them a living wage.
Or as the robber barons (past and current) might have put it, "we care about our workers. But not enough to pay them a living wage.
Lies and half truths
seem to make up the large majority of corporate communications today.
As Budd Schulberg's Sammy Glick might have blurted, "Why tell the truth when you can lie?"
Or as Chico Marx once Dumonted, "Who you gonna believe, me or your own eyes?"
Then there are these. Just as Soviet. Just as Trumpian. Just as Corporatese. Just as American, in fact.
As Budd Schulberg's Sammy Glick might have blurted, "Why tell the truth when you can lie?"
Or as Chico Marx once Dumonted, "Who you gonna believe, me or your own eyes?"
“This website uses
cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website.”
“This call may be
recorded to ensure quality service.”
“We care about your
privacy.”
“Would you like to buy a bridge in Brooklyn?”
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