Lawrence Lessig’s slide shows and the Change Congress movement

Stanford Law professor, Lawrence Lessig, has been up to his usual awesomeness.

A few months ago he rolled out two excellent slide shows on why he supports Barack Obama (here and here).  I definitely recommend checking these out… they are both reasoned and persuasive.

My own introduction to Lessig’s work was through a different slide show on free culture back when I was in college.  Since then, I’ve read several of his books (available for free on his site), and created/used many Creative Commons-licensed works.

Beyond the two Obama slide shows, Lessig has also started a new non-partisan organization called Change Congress with the following noble goals:

  • No money from lobbyists or PACs
  • No more earmarks
  • Increased Congressional transparency
  • Publicly-financed campaigns

Check out the site and join today.

Customer Service Greediness

Matt Heaton, the founder of BlueHost (the firm that I use to host this site) wrote in his personal blog about the difficulty in balancing customer service needs of hundreds of thousands of customers [link].  He writes that the vast majority of folks contact customer service as needed, and don’t exceed the normal unspoken boundaries that a rational person would adhere to (we’re talking 50 calls/emails to customer service a month).

Then he writes about another group, I call them customer service greedy, who leap over this boundary:

These are the people that are generally new to web hosting and have expectations that are almost impossible to meet. They demand the world, don’t/won’t understand what responsibilities fall under their control (domain issues, script security, etc) and what is under our control (servers, network connectivity etc). Often they will call as many as 50 times in a single month for support and hand holding. These are the people that REFUSE to learn on their own and constantly require us to do everything for them. For their $7 a month they expect instant answers to their questions via phone, chat, and email, and tolerate no faults on our side as if they have a cluster of managed dedicated servers. These customers cost us 10-50 times what they pay us and threaten to leave when things don’t go their way.

I believe it is of the utmost urgency for businesses to provide the highest level of service to all their customers (something BlueHost does very well).  That being said, as part of my work, I’ve always been in communication with customers/clients, both on a close level and at the periphery.  And there can definitely be a *very* small core of folks who are extremely greedy with the finite customer service resources available.  These people can be a drain on the system, causing delayed service for everyone else, and not only eat into profits, but potentially resulting in price increases for everyone.

Sprint recently went so far as to terminate the contracts for thousands of these ‘bad customers’ [link].  Now, I don’t think this was a necessary step – maybe it should have been a last resort.  A more rational approach would have been to notify the greedy group that if they wish to continue to receive exorbitant service, they will have to pay a premium for it.  I think BlueHost should consider doing that.  Hire a few extra customer service reps to handle these trouble accounts, and charge them each an extra x amount per month for a premium service package.

Try to make some lemonade out of those lemons, Matt.

Hillary Clinton is not the experienced candidate

John McCain is the experienced presidential candidate.  Though Sen. Clinton’s shot at taking the nomination is very dim at this point, the ‘experienced candidate’ message she has worked so hard to put out there is quite simply wrong… and continuing to use ‘experience’ as the primary basis to measure her candidacy will only end in ruin, especially against opposition like Sen. John McCain.

And so for all the Democrats that believe experience is the #1 criteria for a candidate, you should have been pulling for Bill Richardson, Chris Dodd, et al, not Hillary Clinton.

Experience is not nearly as important as wisdom and judgment – two things that Sen. Barack Obama definitely has.

For more information on this topic, please check out my friend Will Clarke’s site that covers this topic extensively and puts it much more eloquently than I can.

Full Disclosure:  I am a Barack Obama supporter and have given money to his campaign.