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by SkyPuncher
458 days ago
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Further, I'm not sure what efficiency it provides overall. Is dedicating 20% of your team to support _that_ much different than the entire team spending 20% of their time on support? We've actually found our quality goes up massively when we force our engineers to deal with the problems in the features they ship, directly with customers. We still have dedicated front line support (that rotates weekly), but they run off a playbook for common support needs then delegate everything else out. It really sucks when you get pulled into support a feature you launched, but it really makes you want to build your next features better. Better internal documentation, better customer documentation, better UX/requirements, better edge case handling, etc, etc. |
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I (n=1) would prefer to be answering support tickets for 2 week blocks, and know when the blocks are in my calendar, so that I can plan work around them, rather than trying to debug something while I am being pinged about unrelated stuff all day.