Mar 06 2009

The Art of Asking a Question

Published by Brian at 12:50 pm under Funny, Miscellaneous

Being a polymath I tend to get asked questions on a lot of different things.   Over the years, I’ve often wondered how many wasted minutes were spent deflecting questions with a question regarding the original question.   Anyone in a support-type role knows what I’m talking about, but for the sake of illustration bear with me this example:

Q: Hi Brian, I don’t remember the username.

A: “Username” for what?

Clearly there is an expectation of telepathy, which I have not quite mastered as of yet.   To further cement my issue, allow me another example:

Q: I don’t remember what directory we put that stuff in, do you?

A: What stuff?

My point is, that if you’re initiating a conversation with a question, and you’d really like an answer to that question, try to ensure there is no questioning its completeness.   Here is a wrong/right example:

Q – WRONG: Where did you download that thing from?

Q – RIGHT: The program you used to connect to server2 via the keyboard yesterday… where did you download it from?

As a general rule of thumb, if your question contains any of the following words:

  • thing
  • stuff
  • place

It probably needs some adjustment.

Try to remember the person attempting to answer your question may be juggling dozens of different things, probably has hundreds of numbers, passwords, and other data to remember, and would greatly appreciate the reduced mental workload a few extra words provides.

Your favorite support person will thank you!

4 responses so far

4 Responses to “The Art of Asking a Question”

  1. Jek Porkinson 06 Mar 2009 at 1:06 pm

    Should I stay on target or pull up?

  2. Brianon 06 Mar 2009 at 1:14 pm

    Neither, use the force.

  3. Mikeon 23 May 2009 at 12:08 pm

    Hi, nice posts there :-) thank’s for the interesting information

  4. Piper Christianon 10 Jun 2009 at 11:48 am

    So your complaining about people asking vague questions… It’s like having conversations with my kids… I’m there with ya!

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