gamblingman
VIP Member
So I've been out of the mix on here for a long time. Got away from computer for awhile and then got busy with work, so much work! I'm in construction now as white collar and enjoying it as its pretty stable and it isn't the same thing everyday.
I used to mess with computers all day, everyday especially in college. I was a freakin addict and couldn't learn enough. Life interrupts us, and I got pulled away from a lot of the things I used to enjoy. I learned A LOT on this forum. If it weren't for the long term users you see around like Johnb35 I wouldn't have the knowledge set I do.
One thing I never realized fully was how utterly incapable the average user is of doing nearly anything on their computer. The things nearly all of us take for granted and do as reflex, the regular user finds incredibly complex and annoying. Say you want to transfer a set of files from your download folder to another location on your local drive.
Now imagine that takes at least 30-45 seconds to complete. Click the individual files you need from the host site, find the download button then click it and wait for the green circle at the bottom to finish spinning. double click that and pick the individual files out and CUT THEN PASTE EACH FILE to your desktop... then slowly repeat to transfer to your desired folder.
This is the rule not the exception, its the rule. The main thing I hear from everyone is "I hate computers, I dont know why we cant just use paper for everything!". Maybe you've heard some of this from people occasionally. But trust me that users dont say hardly anything to IT about any issues or difficulties because "IT is just gonna messup my stuff and do things to my computer!".
When I started in this estimation position I quickly became "the IT guy". I slowly introduced new ways of doing things that we undeniably better ways of doing things and did not require any additional user knowledge. For instance I created standard forms for commonly used documents with adobe where the user no longer had to hand write anything, no printing the doc to sign it and scan it back in.... now they can type what they want in predefined blanks and keep it. I added shortcuts to commonly used folders in explorer, I got everyone the adobe pdf reader or pro version and uninstalled all the other "its a pdf creater progrem for fRee", got us on dropbox instead of FTP.
Those were small items but they were each massive steps to the majority of our users! You cant imagine the hesitation of some users who were legitimately worried that a new program or a shortcut to a folder would delete their files!!! It was nearly comical at times.
The main thing I can pass along today is when dealing with users keep it more than simple, make it dumbed down. You know how people say "pretend youre talking to a child".... no, you need to pretend youre talking to someone who is scared the computer is an unpredictable machine that is complex and confuses them to the point they'd rather carve stone tablets than use a mouse.
Imagine you're explaining the monthly maintenance routine via email... "please leave all workstations user accounts logged out but the station powered on, if you are out of the office be sure to connect to the vpn so we can connect and recombine hash to localize the points of diversion to distribute mathematical anti telliharsic halfphatum floating bit points into a stable matrix.....".
THATS WHAT IT SOUNDS LIKE TO THE NORMAL PERSON!!! I couldn't believe it at first because I was so deep into the IT mindset that our terms are normal. But most people have spent their life focused totally on other things than computers and how to use one. Then we come in as a stranger and start throwing a bunch of mental wrenches in their minds and confusing them with new terms and ways of doing things. The answer to talking to average users about a topic like monthly maintenance is NOTHING! Yeah, if youre telling them what youre doing and when I promise youre gonna confuse people and annoy them. You should be like Futurama... When you do things right, people won't be sure you've done anything at all.
So work behind the scenes, via automated tasks. Need to restart servers? Do it over the evening about 6pm or during a friday lunch time when nobody will notice or care.
Want a few tips more I've seen work to get your clients to relax and get used to your team?
Let me know what you think and next time I'll try to expand on this. This isn't a perfect view of what I'm seeing but its pretty accurate, at least from the massive world of construction workers, both white and blue collar.
I used to mess with computers all day, everyday especially in college. I was a freakin addict and couldn't learn enough. Life interrupts us, and I got pulled away from a lot of the things I used to enjoy. I learned A LOT on this forum. If it weren't for the long term users you see around like Johnb35 I wouldn't have the knowledge set I do.
One thing I never realized fully was how utterly incapable the average user is of doing nearly anything on their computer. The things nearly all of us take for granted and do as reflex, the regular user finds incredibly complex and annoying. Say you want to transfer a set of files from your download folder to another location on your local drive.
Now imagine that takes at least 30-45 seconds to complete. Click the individual files you need from the host site, find the download button then click it and wait for the green circle at the bottom to finish spinning. double click that and pick the individual files out and CUT THEN PASTE EACH FILE to your desktop... then slowly repeat to transfer to your desired folder.
This is the rule not the exception, its the rule. The main thing I hear from everyone is "I hate computers, I dont know why we cant just use paper for everything!". Maybe you've heard some of this from people occasionally. But trust me that users dont say hardly anything to IT about any issues or difficulties because "IT is just gonna messup my stuff and do things to my computer!".
When I started in this estimation position I quickly became "the IT guy". I slowly introduced new ways of doing things that we undeniably better ways of doing things and did not require any additional user knowledge. For instance I created standard forms for commonly used documents with adobe where the user no longer had to hand write anything, no printing the doc to sign it and scan it back in.... now they can type what they want in predefined blanks and keep it. I added shortcuts to commonly used folders in explorer, I got everyone the adobe pdf reader or pro version and uninstalled all the other "its a pdf creater progrem for fRee", got us on dropbox instead of FTP.
Those were small items but they were each massive steps to the majority of our users! You cant imagine the hesitation of some users who were legitimately worried that a new program or a shortcut to a folder would delete their files!!! It was nearly comical at times.
The main thing I can pass along today is when dealing with users keep it more than simple, make it dumbed down. You know how people say "pretend youre talking to a child".... no, you need to pretend youre talking to someone who is scared the computer is an unpredictable machine that is complex and confuses them to the point they'd rather carve stone tablets than use a mouse.
Imagine you're explaining the monthly maintenance routine via email... "please leave all workstations user accounts logged out but the station powered on, if you are out of the office be sure to connect to the vpn so we can connect and recombine hash to localize the points of diversion to distribute mathematical anti telliharsic halfphatum floating bit points into a stable matrix.....".
THATS WHAT IT SOUNDS LIKE TO THE NORMAL PERSON!!! I couldn't believe it at first because I was so deep into the IT mindset that our terms are normal. But most people have spent their life focused totally on other things than computers and how to use one. Then we come in as a stranger and start throwing a bunch of mental wrenches in their minds and confusing them with new terms and ways of doing things. The answer to talking to average users about a topic like monthly maintenance is NOTHING! Yeah, if youre telling them what youre doing and when I promise youre gonna confuse people and annoy them. You should be like Futurama... When you do things right, people won't be sure you've done anything at all.
So work behind the scenes, via automated tasks. Need to restart servers? Do it over the evening about 6pm or during a friday lunch time when nobody will notice or care.
Want a few tips more I've seen work to get your clients to relax and get used to your team?
Let me know what you think and next time I'll try to expand on this. This isn't a perfect view of what I'm seeing but its pretty accurate, at least from the massive world of construction workers, both white and blue collar.