Long story made short: call me jaded, but I don’t think I would want to work for a company that uses a phrase like this to describe their customer service reps.
:dubious:
Long story made short: call me jaded, but I don’t think I would want to work for a company that uses a phrase like this to describe their customer service reps.
:dubious:
So, um, who calls them that? Do they not get the 1984 implications?
I’ve only seen it when I had to contact GoFundMe once. Didn’t think much of it.
Any company that goes on and on about how much fun people have while working there should be aware that they’re raising big huge red flags that are readily visible to most people over the age of 20.
BTW, this is a health care entity. :smack:
Great, another term for “massage therapist” (think happy ending).
People can get a cheeseburger anywhere, okay? They come to Chotchkie’s for the atmosphere and the attitude, okay? That’s what the flair’s about; it’s about fun.
Yeah. Okay, so more then, yeah?
(Excellent clip, kudos!)
I worked as a grocery cashier for 2 years, then a customer service rep (finally manager) for 7 years after that.
But, “Customer Happiness Expert”???
I dunno if I could have kept a straight face if they’d offered me that title. Probably. I was a lot more corporate-proper in those days. I took Mission Statements, Total Quality Management, and Six Sigma seriously. (Don’t know anything about Six Sigma, but I know that making fun of it was not a good idea in front of management types.)
Now, though, I think I would hurt myself laughing if my job changed my title to “Customer Happiness Expert”.
I used to work with a pharmacist who referred to it as “Six Sigmoid”.
Unless these people are all Brady Bunch kids, I’m calling bullshit.
I have an email in my inbox from someone in GoFundMe Customer Happiness.
Was gonna say, sounded like what you put in your resumé to cover for those two years dancing at the Spearmint Rhino…