When “Self-Service” Feels Like Customer PunishmentRahel Anne Bailie explores how broken support experiences shift the burden onto customers — and why technical writers play a critical role in stopping the chaosRahel Anne Bailie’s post on broken customer support should make every tech writer wince. Bailie’s point is straightforward: companies keep shifting support work onto customers, then pretend the result is “self-service.” But when users have to decode vague instructions, fight bots, repeat context, navigate broken interfaces, and solve prerequisite problems before solving the actual problem, that isn’t support. It’s unpaid labor. For tech writers, the lesson is clear: documentation is part of customer experience. If support content doesn’t explain what to do, when to do it, who can do it, what happens next, and how to recover when things go wrong, users don’t feel empowered. They feel abandoned. Self-service only works when the content, interface, and support path are designed around real human situations — not idealized workflows dreamed up in a conference room. 🤠
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