Stop Ruining It

(seths.blog)

53 points | by herbertl 4 hours ago ago

14 comments

  • fifticon 8 minutes ago

    This reminds me of trying to use File Explorer in Windows 11. I wish I could turn all their electron-app "improvements" off, to make it useful again, like it once was.. Case in point: Explorer now has tabs. I don't need tabs, I need a single tab, and a window title bar so I can drag the damn thing around. And.. my single tab, now tries to show the folder name, truncated to a few useless characters, so I now have tabs called "C:\folder\sub1\...", while the rest of the row is EMPTY SPACE (which I, admittedly can still use to drag the window around; thank you for that, but it will probably be filled with ADS come next month.)

    "Oh, but you can just see the folder name in the address bar in the next row instead then!"

    NO I CAN'T. Because they electron-css-screwed that up too.. It now shows a bunch of toolbar buttons <- -> ^ , then a computer screen??, then >, then [...] Then they truncate the file path to only show parts of it, starting the rest with ... Is it because we are out of space? I don't know, every part of the folder path has been separated with [ > ] (because / or \ was obviously the worst idea ever.) Then, to the right of it all, we get a big [Search log ] edit field, followed by a spyglass. So, I get two broken displays of the actual folder path, and a lot of 'candy' I did not ask for. Why does the search tool need so much space, before I am using it at all? What does it need, apart from maybe the single spyglass icon? Instead, the actual path that my object by necessity ALWAYS will have, has been chopped up to unrecognisability.

    It reeks of KPI and bonus performance reviews, "we must improve the round shape of the wheel, to get our bonus and not be downsized".

  • dijksterhuis an hour ago

    > Customer delight isn’t something we add to our projects. It’s what’s left if we don’t ruin it.

    my anecdotal experience in this is that getting back X (customer delight / curiosity etc) once you’ve ruined it will usually take longer / be more costly than having just not ruined it in the first place.

    also, at some point you will ruin it. at that point it’s a question of by how much and if you choose to un-ruin it.

    sometimes doing nothing is a more useful skill than doing something.

    • FinnLobsien 25 minutes ago

      I think it depends on what exactly happened.

      If a heritage shoe company doubles prices, moves production overseas while producing worse quality, and then markets explicitly to a fringe political group, it's hard to un-ruin it. Brand images are sticky and production facilities don't re-emerge in your home country out of thin air.

      But if a software company were to genuinely own up to their mistakes and say "We went wrong in this specific way and we're going to fix it by sunsetting [hated feature], reverting pricing to the old policy, and prioritize fixing application speed and stability", then you can salvage some trust.

    • naravara an hour ago

      I go back and forth on this. Maybe it is the right inclination with software development where there is a strong drive to keep pushing more features and trade offs in terms of “technical debt” or footprint can get pretty abstract at scale. But then I think of an operation like the Disney Parks and it really seems like the delight comes from constant, sustained effort. They’ve got people around attending to everything and fussing over every little detail around the park. They can emergency dispatch characters to an area if they see kids who seem like they might start to have a bad time. They have secret stashes of diaper changing kits and first aid materials so Mickey Mouse can show up and save the day if someone has an accident. There’s ways they’re not ruining it I guess, but the main impression I get is that they just never take their foot off the gas when it comes to making sure everyone is having a good time.

  • Hugsbox an hour ago

    > Trust isn’t something a brand builds with an ad campaign. It’s what’s left if the marketers don’t ruin it.

    So much this. Are ads still a measurably good investment for businesses? I'm assuming they wouldn't run them anymore if not, but they feel so out of touch these days that it's really hard to imagine them really working on anybody.

    Sorry for the side-tangent, just felt like that last bit of the post really drove home the point best - at least for me.

    • hootz 30 minutes ago

      I guess they can work when no one knows about you. After a certain point, there must be diminishing returns in comparison to just your current customers recommending your product to their friends.

    • tardedmeme 44 minutes ago

      According to Cory Doctorow, P&G (Proctor&Gamble) canceled $200m of ad spend and saw no change in sales

      • rileymat2 28 minutes ago

        https://www.reuters.com/article/business/pg-says-cut-digital...

        > The consumer goods conglomerate said it cut digital spending by more $100 million between April and June of 2017 and continued with the cuts at the same rate for the rest of the year.

        >P&G, however, has not cut overall media spending. Funds have been reinvested to increase media reach, including in areas such as TV, audio and ecommerce media, a company spokeswoman told Reuters.

        Looks like they still spent it in marketing and advertising just not digital spending. Also for sticky old well known consumer goods I’d wager sales drop slowly.

  • epsteingpt 17 minutes ago

    The irony that the packages system looks so obviously and clearly 'baseline claude' designed is a sign of the moment itself.

  • FinnLobsien 34 minutes ago

    As someone who works in marketing, this is extremely true. Right now, LLMs are causing a lot of one-time cashing in of trust.

    I've seen this pattern a bunch:

    1. Person builds trust on X/LinkedIn or via an insightful blog/newsletter (substitute your channel of choice here) for a few years because they have unique opinions, interesting stories from personal experience, are entertaining/charismatic, or share data/insights nobody else has.

    2. They realize "AI can do this now" and use AI trained on past content to generate the content.

    3. They post the content

    4. People initially keep engaging because their AI-generated content inherits some of the trust they built up

    5. People realize their posts are AI slop and feel tricked or simply no longer enjoy the posts.

    6. Engagement falls off a cliff because the assumption has changed from "If I see this person/company in a feed, it's got a good chance to be interesting" to "If I see this person/company in a feed, it's guaranteed to be AI slop.

    There's a temporary "Have your cake and eat it too" phase where you get the results without doing the work. But once that ends, you have to build the brand all over again because it's been tarnished.

    (Fyi my take isn't that everything needs to be hand-written and no AI can ever be used in writing. Just that this cycle keeps repeating because people don't do the work anymore. You can use AI and still be doing the work of generating genuinely good writing)

    • JackFr 10 minutes ago

      Path to X happiness:

      - Eschew the "For You", Read tweets only from people you have chosen to follow.

      - Only follow people who have a bona fide livelihood outside social media, avoid anyone for whose income is largely driven by "engagement".

  • iLoveOncall an hour ago

    I've read haikus that made more sense than this streak of random words.

    Feels like an article generated using GPT-1.

    • zaphar an hour ago

      Feels to opposite to me. GPT-1 would have exploded the word count to about 10x and made it sound way more breathlessly influencer coded. GPT-1 would have written something that was 180 degrees opposite of what the post is communicating.

      Perhaps you need to read it again a little more carefully?

      • stavros an hour ago

        I think it was hyperbole, and that the GP does not literally believe this was written by GPT-1, which did not produce coherent sentences.