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Running into issues with an update to Windows XP SP3? There’s free help available

Patrick Marshall has a weekly column in the The Seattle Times where he answers reader questions “about everything from recovering deleted files to the pros and cons of handheld technology.”  Today he has a column in which he responded to a reader having difficulty installing Windows XP Service Pack 3 (SP3) and noted that Installing Service Pack 3 is worth the trouble

Q:I have a Dell Deminsion 8300 PC with Windows XP Home Edition, Service Pack 2. Periodically I receive pop-ups from Microsoft asking me to download a software update. Last week I received a request from Microsoft to download the Service Pack 3. I started the download, which seemed to take a long time so I left the PC for about 45 minutes. …

Now when I turn on the PC it is still asking me to install Service Pack 3, but I am afraid to try again. Should I give it another try or ignore this download request from Microsoft?

A: Installing updates can be frustrating, but if you want to keep using Windows XP, I’d recommend that you install Service Pack 3. It contains dozens of major enhancements and fixes, including security patches.

As I posted previously here, Microsoft offers free Technical Support on Windows XP Service Pack 3 (SP3), available on the SP3 support site. [updated: if you are unable to get to the XP SP3 support site via the previous link, please visit http://support.microsoft.com/ph/1173.]  Customers are entitled to free unlimited installation and compatibility support for Windows XP SP3 when they update their older versions of Windows XP (from Windows XP RTM, SP1 or SP2), valid until April 14, 2009. (Visit the page for more info on service options and the policy).

Tags: Microsoft, customer support, feedback, customer service, Windows XP, SP3.

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Your questions: “How do I make Internet Explorer my default web browser?”

As I work in the Windows division, a letter made its way to my office: a customer mail sent to one of our senior leaders that asked…

“How do I set up Internet Explorer to be my default web browser?”

Simple question you may say, but unfortunately in this case, the customer noted that they were unable to find the information on our web sites or using online help.  So, after first apologizing for the difficulty the customer had in locating the information, I then provided the following steps on how to configure your PC to use Internet Explorer your default web browser. 

The following Microsoft Knowledge Base Article answers the question: How to Make Internet Explorer the Default Web Browser (kb 284456, as located through Live Search).

For Internet Explorer 3.x, 4.x, 5.x…

  1. Open Control Panel and double-click Internet Options.
  2. Click the Programs tab.
  3. Click to select the Internet Explorer should check to see whether it is the default browser check box.
  4. Click OK.
  5. Start Internet Explorer and when you are prompted to make it the default browser, click Yes.

imageFor IE 6 and IE7, you may also use the following steps…

  1. Launch “Internet Explorer”.
  2. If a message is displayed asking if you want Internet Explorer to be your default browser, click “Yes”. That’s all you need to do.
    If a message does not appear, go to the next step.
  3. Click the “Tools” button, and then click “Internet Options”.
  4. Click the “Programs” tab, and then click “Make default”.
  5. Click “OK”, and then close Internet Explorer.  Internet Explorer is now the default web browser.

For future, immediate self help, you can often find answers using the Live Search site at http://search.live.com/, http://support.microsoft.com/contactus/cu_inventory, or visit the main Microsoft Support page at http://support.microsoft.com/.  In the US, customers may also use one of the free customer support features such as real-time chat at http://support.microsoft.com/contactus/cu_sc_more_master#tab1.

Microsoft is absolutely focused on delivering the best customer experience.  We’ll always have more work to do, but we’re confident about delivering the best set of experiences for our customers and partners now and in the future.  It’s so important for us to hear from customers using our products, so please send us feedback on what we’re doing well and areas for improvement.

Tags: Microsoft, customer support, feedback, customer service, IE7, Internet Explorer.

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Connecting with Customers via Windows Error Reporting (Watson) and CEIP

Earlier this week, I provided a couple of glimpses at how product groups listen and respond to customers and partners.  In the seven plus years I’ve been at Microsoft, I’ve seen lots of different ways how product teams listen and respond to customers.  Previously, I worked along side the Engineering Excellence group, working on CPE across the product groups; now, I’m back in the Windows group… but I still work across product groups as they concentrate on improving customer satisfaction.

And core to the effort in most teams is the product and machine telemetry we get from millions and millions of customers through Microsoft Windows Error Reporting, the Customer Experience Improvement Program and software quality metrics (aka SQM, or ‘squim’).  For more on SQM, see this prior post.

Windows Error Reporting dialogWindows Error Reporting (WER) is based on the technology that was originally known as Dr. Watson, the Windows program error debugger tool included in previous versions of Windows, as far back as Windows 3.0, and was included in Windows 98, Me, and XP.(Check out Raymond’s blog to understand why Windows Error Reporting is nicknamed “Dr. Watson”.) 

WER captures software crash and hang data from end-users who agree to report it. You can access the data that is related to your applications online at https://winqual.microsoft.comGregg offers an overview on his blog on developers can use WER to debug what went wrong.  In Windows, WER feedback technology is part of Microsoft Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Microsoft Windows Server 2003 and 2008 operating systems.

We know that the effort makes an impact: as outlined in the above article, our analysis shows that across all the issues that exist on the affected Windows platforms and the number of incidents received:

  • Fixing 20 percent of the top-reported bugs can solve 80 percent of customer issues.
  • Addressing 1 percent of the bugs would address 50 percent of the customer issues.

Considering the hundreds of millions of customers around the world, that’s a considerable impact. 

Steve Ballmer outlined the effort in his 2002 letter on “Connecting to customers,” when he discussed how Microsoft can do a better job of serving our customers, and ultimately improve the customer experience through better communications and connections…

“The process of finding and fixing software problems has been hindered by a lack of reliable data on the precise nature of the problems customers encounter in the real world. Freeze-ups and crashes can be incredibly irritating, but rarely do customers contact technical support about them; instead, they close the program. Even when customers do call support and we resolve a problem, we often do not glean enough detail to trace its cause or prevent it from recurring.

“To give us better feedback, a small team in our Office group built a system that helps us gather real-world data about the causes of customers’ problems–in particular, about crashes. This system is now built into Office, Windows, and most of our other major products, including our forthcoming Windows .NET Servers. It enables customers to send us an error report, if they choose, whenever anything goes wrong.”

With WER, product groups get information that helps them identify the most common issues that our customers encounter on their computers, along with details that can help the teams debug the problem.  If you’ve every run into a problem or application crash on your computer, chances are that you’ve seen the prompt to provide more information to Microsoft on the failure.

We also provide WER for Independent Software Vendors (ISVs) and Hardware Vendors (IHVs) on the MSDN forums, helping them find and correct issues with their application, ultimately leading to improvements in their products.  These companies access our error reports database and discussion forums to address the errors and incompatibilities that creep up in their equipment drivers, software utilities and applications. (As noted on our sites, WER data is available to ISVs, IHVs and OEM and ODMs.)

Bill Gates said at PDC 2003…

“We allow anyone who has an application that runs on Windows to sign up and get the reports that relate to their application, and we’ve got winqual.microsoft.com where people can do that.

“Today we’ve seen a lot of that activity from the driver manufacturers, but we want to see even more at the application level so it gets us working together on anything where a user is not having a great experience.”

Coupled with the telemetry from WER is the feedback we get through the Microsoft Customer Experience Improvement Program (CEIP).  Through these programs, hundreds of millions of customers help Microsoft improve upon the design, quality and features of our products and services. Participation in the CEIP is anonymous: when you sign up for the CEIP, information about how you use certain products is automatically sent to Microsoft, collected in the aggregate with CEIP data from other computers.  Microsoft doesn’t use your collected CEIP data for any product marketing or promotions. (More details are provided in the Customer Experience Improvement Program Privacy Policy.) 

According to the CEIP site…

CEIP collects information about how you use Microsoft programs and about some of the problems you encounter. Microsoft uses this information to improve the products and features you use most often and to help solve problems. Participation in the program is strictly voluntary, and the end results are software improvements to better meet your needs.

The Windows Server team uses the CEIP for their products, include Windows Server 2008.  The team uses CEIP to improve the product in the following ways:

  • Helps to discover and fix software bugs in the operating system more quickly.
  • Helps to prioritize future Windows Server products and interim releases.
  • Helps to understand our customer system configurations more clearly, allowing Windows Server product teams to more accurately reproduce customer environments in their labs.
  • Helps to determine industry trends in computer hardware.

As John Song notes on the Dynamics CRM team blog, the team gathers information on how our customers are using the customization tool and how much they are customizing the out-of-the-box CRM. 

CEIP“Through SQM/CEIP data, now we know that the Account is the most updated form in the CRM 3.0 (Well, that wasn’t a surprise for us, but the number of changes made was). A quarter of the CRM customers are adding good amount of new fields in the Account and other “main” forms.

It’s all about providing feedback to the products teams. 

Mauro Meanti on the WSYP Project[Update: you can see the WSYP video here on YouTube: https://youtu.be/D28FkfJiauk]

When I’m asked about how this data is used, I often point people to my post “TwC’s site on Product Reliability… and WSYP” that has has a link to the WSYP Project, looking at how we leverage customer feedback in near real-time to improve software quality. (You can find this and other clips on the TechNet UK Spotlight page.)

And yes, Mauro is a real Microsoft employee. ; )

You can take advantage of WER to investigate the most frequently reported software crashes, resolve the problems, and inform your customers of the fixes, establishing a strong feedback loop with your customers. 

 

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Also available via http://bit.ly/AxnhyW 

Link: How Windows Error Reporting Helps Customers

Tags: Microsoft, Watson, customer feedback, WER, Windows Error Reporting, SQM, CEIP, Video.

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Speak Your Mind: Dynamics hears the voice of the customer, with video, too

As I posted yesterday in Hearing the voice of the customer- learning how to listen and respond, I reflected that sometimes it’s more difficult for larger, more complex and diverse companies to nimbly listen and respond.  And it seems that as you get larger and more global, it is a challenge to continue to inject customer service into the DNA of the organization. 

What’s amazing to me is how in touch many of the exec at Microsoft are with the voice of the customer, and how they keep in touch with that feedback.  Some of it through direct emails sent to execs, feedback from enterprise customers and MVPs,

imageOne interesting way that one of our teams has made the voice of the customer (aka “VOC” or “VOTC” around campus) is through the efforts captured by the Dynamics CPE team. 

At the Dynamics Convergence Conference last year, the team had installed “Speak Your Mind” booths in the Convention Center to capture real customer and partner feedback on video. (Note that the team just returned from the latest latest Convergence held in Orlando.) 

Similar in concept to the infamous Rogers Cable Speakers’ Corner booth (my Canuck friends will no doubt recall, and hat’s off to friends/readers at Rogers), imagine if you will a computerized video photo booth…  In this case, all you had to do to leave feedback for Rogers was to step into the Speakers’ Corner, push the green button and to speak your mind.  With this, people could stand on a proverbial soapbox, give live performances (as the Barenaked Ladies did early in their career, as legend has it) and espouse their personal and political views, all from the comfort of a space not much larger than a phone booth. 

Well, as went the early makings of reality television, so goes Microsoft with Speak Your Mind…

imageSpeak Your Mind – This is your opportunity to provide your feedback in the first person. Tell us about the features, the functionality, the integration, the upgrade, the Implementation—whatever is on your mind as we are ready to listen. Go ahead and Speak Your Mind.

Partners and customers that attended Convergence were invited to step into the Speak Your Mind booth, as Infoworld covered in an article last year.  In the booth, they were encouraged to provide direct feedback to the Dynamics team (and sometimes feedback on other products) to “help drive changes for future product releases and service plans,” according to the info on the Dynamics site.  In their coverage on the page “Speak Your Mind Videos Put to Good Use“, Norma Smith (featured at right) said in a blog post last summer that the feedback is heard, and put to good use: 

“Well, I’m pleased to tell you that A LOT has happened to these 1200+ videos.  Here’s the scoop.  Within  about four weeks after Convergence these feedback videos had been individually reviewed and posted to a keyword-searchable internal site accessible only by Microsoft team members. 

“Now here’s the cool part.  As of May 31st, five weeks after initial posting, MBS team members have watched over 2,000 Speak Your Mind videos.  Collectively, that’s a lot of knowledge and a lot of insight getting into the hands of the folks who can influence change.  The videos are being incorporated into strategy planning, product reviews, etc. 

“Our Technical Support teams have taken the videos quite seriously and really gone the extra mile.  I’ve heard about a few cases where a Dynamics customer has received a personal phone call from Support – wherein the Dynamics Support Engineer identified him/herself, advised them that they had heard about their product concerns from the Speak Your Mind video, and then proceeded to show them how to resolve the issue.  Proactive outreach from Support.  Super happy customer.”

Many managers and executives in customer service, product development, marketing and sales have heard and seen the feedback and read transcriptions of the videos to help the division improve on our products and services.  It’s one way that we take customer comments to scale and make them accessible to employees in the company.

Tags: Microsoft, Dynamics, customer support, Rogers, feedback, customer service, Norma Smith.

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Sony offers customers a way to “opt out” of trial ware and applications on new TZ notebook PCs for free

Breaking: Sony Won’t Charge $50 To Remove Bloatware | Gadget Lab from Wired.com


Peter Sayer of infoWorld noted noted in an article yesterday that Sony initially offered to remove some of the trial software installed on new laptops for a fee…


“Buyers of the configure-to-order versions of its Vaio TZ2000 and Vaio TZ2500 laptops can opt to have Sony remove the some of its own applications, in addition to trial software and games.  The “Fresh Start” option, billed as a software optimization, costs $49.99, and is only available to customers choosing to pay an additional $100 to upgrade the operating system to Windows Vista Business from the Windows Vista Home Premium edition offered as standard.”


Fast forward 24 hours and now Wired reports on the gadgets blog that Sony reversed the plan to charge to remove pre-installed applications from the TZ-series of Sony notebooks.  Sony now makes the opt-out option free when customers select the Windows Vista Business Edition.  Says Wired’s Rob Beschizza…


“Earlier today, PC World reported that Sony would charge $50 for a configuration option called “Fresh Start,” which would not include the bloatware. When contacted by Gadget Lab, a spokesperson for Sony said that the company will now remove that charge.



“There will be no charge for Fresh Start,” said the spokesman.”


IMHO, impressive that Sony listened to customer and press feedback and responded by revising the offer.  I see this is another example of PC companies responding to customer requests to provide a sleek and streamlined experience free of software that may impact customer satisfaction with their new purchase.  Dell’s Michelle Pearcy, WW Client Software Manager noted that Dell would respond with options for customers requesting “No Bloatware, Please”… 


“Our goal is to provide useful pre-loaded software to our customers that want it, while giving intuitive options to customers that don’t.  We’ll stay focused on finding that balance.”


Ultimately, as noted in Dell & Bloatware, 2007, Dell started to offer an opt-out configuration of Dimension desktops, Inspiron notebooks and XPS PCs in response to customer demand. Pearcy continued…


“This means when you configure a system on Dell.com, you have the option of choosing “No software pre-installed” for things like productivity software, ISP software and photo and music software. On most XPS systems, the no software options are the default choice.”


Tags: computers, Sony, Dell, Michelle Pearcy, support, customer service.