MSP Teams in the SMB
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@scottalanmiller said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
@Dashrender said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
I stopped by my upstairs neighbors place in my office. They used to have an MSP handle their stuff. They dumped them after the MSP sent a tech who sat at their office for nearly 16 hours doing nearly nothing, my contact told me the tech was literally twiddling his thumbs. When my contact asked when it would be fix, the guy jumped to, and 30 mins later it was fixed and he left.
The MSP then billed that client for the 16 hours of the tech being there.
I have no additional details, but the client was pretty unhappy to see a tech just sitting there basically doing nothing, not typing, not searching the internet for fixes, just sitting for nearly 2 days, then suddenly, when asked when it will be fixed, hopping to and fixing it.
As Scott mentioned this was clearly and hourly bill situation, not a monthly contract (at least not a contract for break/fix - I do know they had a monthly reoccurring cost for things like backups on the server, and network monitoring).
This is clearly an example of a bad MSP - or at minimum a bad employee at an MSP.
Well, there is a bit of assumption there. What if that guy was busting hump for sixteen hours, knew what the issue was, had the fix underway, was waiting on a system to finish a reboot or update that had 30 minutes left and just happened to get asked how long it would be at the end after having done an excellent job for two days. We are assuming that he was twiddling his thumbs for two days, and likely that is true, but unless they really checked up, there is a ton of room for error there. What if that was an internal IT guy, would they have reacted the same? If not, why not? Internal IT staff are generally hourly as well, same factors.
I thought I left room for your added possible situation - but the fact that the tech didn't offer an explanation that of what had been going on for days, instead (as it was told to me ) the tech offered nothing, but jumped to a fix and was gone.
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@scottalanmiller said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
What if that was an internal IT guy, would they have reacted the same? If not, why not? Internal IT staff are generally hourly as well, same factors.
Yes I think they would have questioned internal IT for just sitting there for 2 days preventing someone else from using the machine.
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@Dashrender said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
@scottalanmiller said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
@Dashrender said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
I stopped by my upstairs neighbors place in my office. They used to have an MSP handle their stuff. They dumped them after the MSP sent a tech who sat at their office for nearly 16 hours doing nearly nothing, my contact told me the tech was literally twiddling his thumbs. When my contact asked when it would be fix, the guy jumped to, and 30 mins later it was fixed and he left.
The MSP then billed that client for the 16 hours of the tech being there.
I have no additional details, but the client was pretty unhappy to see a tech just sitting there basically doing nothing, not typing, not searching the internet for fixes, just sitting for nearly 2 days, then suddenly, when asked when it will be fixed, hopping to and fixing it.
As Scott mentioned this was clearly and hourly bill situation, not a monthly contract (at least not a contract for break/fix - I do know they had a monthly reoccurring cost for things like backups on the server, and network monitoring).
This is clearly an example of a bad MSP - or at minimum a bad employee at an MSP.
Well, there is a bit of assumption there. What if that guy was busting hump for sixteen hours, knew what the issue was, had the fix underway, was waiting on a system to finish a reboot or update that had 30 minutes left and just happened to get asked how long it would be at the end after having done an excellent job for two days. We are assuming that he was twiddling his thumbs for two days, and likely that is true, but unless they really checked up, there is a ton of room for error there. What if that was an internal IT guy, would they have reacted the same? If not, why not? Internal IT staff are generally hourly as well, same factors.
I thought I left room for your added possible situation - but the fact that the tech didn't offer an explanation that of what had been going on for days, instead (as it was told to me ) the tech offered nothing, but jumped to a fix and was gone.
Was there a reason for the tech to explain? Put yourself in the tech's position, you have no reason to think that the customer thinks what we think here. It was a major issue, a miracle that they fixed it so quickly, someone checked on status, he provided one. If the tech was screwing off, it would seem obvious that an excuse was needed. If the tech was working hard that whole time, there would be no reason to feel the need to offer an excuse. The assumption that an excuse would be provided if there was a valid one is, I think, backwards. If a valid excuse was available, the tech would never realize one should be offered. That no one asked for one does the same for me - that makes me assume that they were looking for an excuse to get rid of them and didn't care that there was possibly a totally valid reason. They saw an excuse and took it.
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@Dashrender said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
@scottalanmiller said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
What if that was an internal IT guy, would they have reacted the same? If not, why not? Internal IT staff are generally hourly as well, same factors.
Yes I think they would have questioned internal IT for just sitting there for 2 days preventing someone else from using the machine.
AND they would fire him without asking for a reason? I find that unlikely and, if so, makes them a horrific company that is clueless and capricious. It's not okay to fire someone for fixing something. Sounds like a bad company making excuses. It sounds like marketing to make it sound like the MSP's fault. This isn't how a good customer behaves, they'd fine out WHY it took so long first. See if another company thinks that that makes sense. Not just fire people for something so incredibly random, that's beyond fishy.
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Maid comes to clean my house. She's there ALL day long. I show up at the end of the day. I find her sitting around. I ask her when the floors will be dry so I can walk across the. She says in five minutes. I wait for her to go home and call the maid service and fire them because she "sits around the house all day" because I "checked and the floors weren't dry when I got home but were minutes later so clearly they do no work."
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Instead of working from assumption, let's look at only the factual bits:
- MSP fixed the issue.
- MSP took two days to fix the issue.
- Customer checked in shortly before issue was fixed.
Those are the facts. The rest is conjecture and coincidence. Sure, there is every possibility that the tech was sitting idle wasting time. There is always every possibility that he was not. What we know for sure is that from the info given, the company has zero, literally zero, reason to fire the MSP. Maybe they have more info that they are not telling us, but maybe not. But if they did, don't you think they'd want it to sound like a valid firing rather than bragging that they randomly fired a guy who helped them out?
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@scottalanmiller said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
@Dashrender said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
@scottalanmiller said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
@Dashrender said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
I stopped by my upstairs neighbors place in my office. They used to have an MSP handle their stuff. They dumped them after the MSP sent a tech who sat at their office for nearly 16 hours doing nearly nothing, my contact told me the tech was literally twiddling his thumbs. When my contact asked when it would be fix, the guy jumped to, and 30 mins later it was fixed and he left.
The MSP then billed that client for the 16 hours of the tech being there.
I have no additional details, but the client was pretty unhappy to see a tech just sitting there basically doing nothing, not typing, not searching the internet for fixes, just sitting for nearly 2 days, then suddenly, when asked when it will be fixed, hopping to and fixing it.
As Scott mentioned this was clearly and hourly bill situation, not a monthly contract (at least not a contract for break/fix - I do know they had a monthly reoccurring cost for things like backups on the server, and network monitoring).
This is clearly an example of a bad MSP - or at minimum a bad employee at an MSP.
Well, there is a bit of assumption there. What if that guy was busting hump for sixteen hours, knew what the issue was, had the fix underway, was waiting on a system to finish a reboot or update that had 30 minutes left and just happened to get asked how long it would be at the end after having done an excellent job for two days. We are assuming that he was twiddling his thumbs for two days, and likely that is true, but unless they really checked up, there is a ton of room for error there. What if that was an internal IT guy, would they have reacted the same? If not, why not? Internal IT staff are generally hourly as well, same factors.
I thought I left room for your added possible situation - but the fact that the tech didn't offer an explanation that of what had been going on for days, instead (as it was told to me ) the tech offered nothing, but jumped to a fix and was gone.
Was there a reason for the tech to explain? Put yourself in the tech's position, you have no reason to think that the customer thinks what we think here. It was a major issue, a miracle that they fixed it so quickly, someone checked on status, he provided one. If the tech was screwing off, it would seem obvious that an excuse was needed. If the tech was working hard that whole time, there would be no reason to feel the need to offer an excuse. The assumption that an excuse would be provided if there was a valid one is, I think, backwards. If a valid excuse was available, the tech would never realize one should be offered. That no one asked for one does the same for me - that makes me assume that they were looking for an excuse to get rid of them and didn't care that there was possibly a totally valid reason. They saw an excuse and took it.
If I hire you to do work for me.. and I see you sitting there for 2 days doing what appears to me like you just twiddling your thumbs for that time and I ask you what the status is - I fully expect a full blow by blow what you have been doing for 2 days. As the customer I feel I have to right to inquire what you are doing with the time I am paying you for.
You're saying that someone asking for a status update means they are trying to get rid of you? really? That seems backwards..
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@scottalanmiller said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
@Dashrender said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
@scottalanmiller said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
What if that was an internal IT guy, would they have reacted the same? If not, why not? Internal IT staff are generally hourly as well, same factors.
Yes I think they would have questioned internal IT for just sitting there for 2 days preventing someone else from using the machine.
AND they would fire him without asking for a reason? I find that unlikely and, if so, makes them a horrific company that is clueless and capricious. It's not okay to fire someone for fixing something. Sounds like a bad company making excuses. It sounds like marketing to make it sound like the MSP's fault. This isn't how a good customer behaves, they'd fine out WHY it took so long first. See if another company thinks that that makes sense. Not just fire people for something so incredibly random, that's beyond fishy.
The MSP wasn't fired after this single instance, there were many issues this was just an instance they specifically mentioned to me. Yes I glossed over the other issues mentioned to me. But they had several complaints. Sadly price was one of them..
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@scottalanmiller said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
Maid comes to clean my house. She's there ALL day long. I show up at the end of the day. I find her sitting around. I ask her when the floors will be dry so I can walk across the. She says in five minutes. I wait for her to go home and call the maid service and fire them because she "sits around the house all day" because I "checked and the floors weren't dry when I got home but were minutes later so clearly they do no work."
I think this is not an acceptable comparison to the tech. You could easily look around the rest of the house and see it was clean - my question is.. why is she sitting around at all? If the answer is, she can't leave until the floor is dry, fine, but if it's .. well she was done - then why didn't she leave? Yes there are all kinds of reasons she was 'sitting' around... some valid some not. but unlike the computer - you could inspect the other things she was suppose to clean to know work was done.. in the computer, it's pretty much an all or nothing situation.
If the work really took that amount of time, I'm sure the tech COULD have provided a reason for it that could satisfy the customer.
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@scottalanmiller said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
- MSP provided good estimate of completion when asked.
What? I never said that!
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@Dashrender said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
@scottalanmiller said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
- MSP provided good estimate of completion when asked.
What? I never said that!
are you claiming this because they guy left 30 mins after he was asked... if you are, that's an assumption on your part... my contact never told me the tech offered a repair time either when the call was opened or when he inquired about the status near the end of 2 days. I have no idea if he was given a time or not. this line just needs to be removed because it's completely unknown.
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@Dashrender said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
@scottalanmiller said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
- MSP provided good estimate of completion when asked.
What? I never said that!
Oh, I thought that you had said that they asked how long, and he said half an hour. He didn't respond and just was done in half an hour?
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@Dashrender said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
@Dashrender said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
@scottalanmiller said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
- MSP provided good estimate of completion when asked.
What? I never said that!
are you claiming this because they guy left 30 mins after he was asked... if you are, that's an assumption on your part... my contact never told me the tech offered a repair time either when the call was opened or when he inquired about the status near the end of 2 days. I have no idea if he was given a time or not. this line just needs to be removed because it's completely unknown.
Gotcha, I got that part incorrect. I'll adjust.
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There you go.
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@scottalanmiller said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
Instead of working from assumption, let's look at only the factual bits:
- MSP fixed the issue.
- MSP took two days to fix the issue.
- MSP provided good estimate of completion when asked.
Those are the facts. The rest is conjecture and coincidence. Sure, there is every possibility that the tech was sitting idle wasting time. There is always every possibility that he was not. What we know for sure is that from the info given, the company has zero, literally zero, reason to fire the MSP. Maybe they have more info that they are not telling us, but maybe not. But if they did, don't you think they'd want it to sound like a valid firing rather than bragging that they randomly fired a guy who helped them out?
LOL bragging - lol there was no bragging. They were unhappy with any reasoning they did receive, or didn't receive any for the amount of time that ticket took.
They also told me that they were slow to respond to tickets in general - but I have no idea what their SLA was, so can't say if this was acceptable or not.I'm not defending them firing them or not.. I'm just wanting to make sure Scott isn't crucifying someone when there really isn't enough information.
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@scottalanmiller said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
@Dashrender said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
@scottalanmiller said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
- MSP provided good estimate of completion when asked.
What? I never said that!
Oh, I thought that you had said that they asked how long, and he said half an hour. He didn't respond and just was done in half an hour?
He did ask - but didn't tell me if there was a response.. left out that detail. He simply moved on to telling me that 30 mins later he left and it worked.
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@Dashrender said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
@scottalanmiller said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
Instead of working from assumption, let's look at only the factual bits:
- MSP fixed the issue.
- MSP took two days to fix the issue.
- MSP provided good estimate of completion when asked.
Those are the facts. The rest is conjecture and coincidence. Sure, there is every possibility that the tech was sitting idle wasting time. There is always every possibility that he was not. What we know for sure is that from the info given, the company has zero, literally zero, reason to fire the MSP. Maybe they have more info that they are not telling us, but maybe not. But if they did, don't you think they'd want it to sound like a valid firing rather than bragging that they randomly fired a guy who helped them out?
LOL bragging - lol there was no bragging. They were unhappy with any reasoning they did receive, or didn't receive any for the amount of time that ticket took.
They also told me that they were slow to respond to tickets in general - but I have no idea what their SLA was, so can't say if this was acceptable or not.I'm not defending them firing them or not.. I'm just wanting to make sure Scott isn't crucifying someone when there really isn't enough information.
I'm not crucifying at all, I'm just stating that they example is pointless. It doesn't show or even suggest an MSP doing a bad job. Just that a customer fired an MSP and the impression given was that the MSP was doing a bad job and people responded as such as, correct me if I am wrong but the intention of the example being given was to portray a bad MSP, but nothing in the example actually shows them having done anything bad.
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@Dashrender said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
@scottalanmiller said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
@Dashrender said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
@scottalanmiller said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
- MSP provided good estimate of completion when asked.
What? I never said that!
Oh, I thought that you had said that they asked how long, and he said half an hour. He didn't respond and just was done in half an hour?
He did ask - but didn't tell me if there was a response.. left out that detail. He simply moved on to telling me that 30 mins later he left and it worked.
So we really have nothing to go on. Why was the person telling you this story without enough details to know which party was supposed to have failed? I feel like it's the framework of a story, but nothing more. If the tech was idle for days and only wrapped up because prompted, the MSP failed. If the tech did a great job and they coincidentally checked up before the work was done, the MSP did a good job (in the one instance we are discussing) probably. But without those details, the story is...
MSP fixed and issue and was fired. The end.
That's it. We don't know if two days was a good amount of time for the issue, what the issue was, what the agreement was between the two parties... nothing.
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@Dashrender said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
This is clearly an example of a bad MSP - or at minimum a bad employee at an MSP.
Here is the wrap up of your original statement. That the MSP or the employee WAS BAD. But we don't have any idea if that is true. Not in the slightest. It's reasonable, it's likely. But there is a huge chance for it not to be true, either. If it was true, we'd expect the story to have details making it seem like it was true rather than just pointing out a coincidence. We know that a customer acting annoyed because IT "appears idle" while thinking or waiting for a process causing us to want to "look busy." That someone "appeared idle" and "hopped to" in IT, as we all know, means literally nothing.
I feel pretty confident that I'm not reading into this, there were assumptions made without basis and the MSP crucified in this thread. But the reality is, we have no reason to think that (or to not think that.) We simply know nothing about the situation. Given that we hear only one side of the story and it sounds so fishy, if we were placing bets I'd bet that it was the customer acting inappropriately, but there is no way to know without a lot more info.
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@Dashrender said in MSP Teams in the SMB:
If I hire you to do work for me.. and I see you sitting there for 2 days doing what appears to me like you just twiddling your thumbs for that time and I ask you what the status is - I fully expect a full blow by blow what you have been doing for 2 days. As the customer I feel I have to right to inquire what you are doing with the time I am paying you for.
Well, I'd say that that is a foolish expectation. A tech may not even be allowed to provide that. You can't have that expectation, you can't. Unless you ask for a blow by blow, have demonstrated that you will understand the answer and are speaking to your account rep and not the hands on tech doing remote hands for an engineer potentially you can't even begin to think that that is how it should work. Can you demand that in your contract? Sure. Unless you know that this customer did that, you can't make this claim, at all. In fact, if a customer said this I'd assume that they knew that they were just making excuses. It's a totally unreasonable thing. That tech is probably there for tech skills, not to be a customer interface guy for the account management team. And the customer is NOT paying that tech, they pay the MSP. The tech has a manager to report to. We have this problem all the time, customers trying to cause problems by knowingly skirting the communications chain hoping to break something, get info, get free service, scare someone or whatever.