- Edited
Another interesting angle is the potential business impact that can be a byproduct of negativity online.
I’ve seen people on other forums criticising those with a negative opinion of a product because of the potential damage it can do to a business.
If it’s unfounded or dishonest criticism, fair enough, but my stance, possibly lacking sympathy, is that we shouldn’t have to censor our critique of genuinely bad products or services for fear of hurting business. Perhaps it’s controversial but I think the onus is on the service provider to make a better product or improve their service.
I work in design and every job I’ve had, justified criticism has always been the catalyst for improvement. I’ve literally had Creative Directors stand over me and say ‘this is garbage, why did you go home on time last night if this is what you came up with ’. Ultimately I’m thankful for it.
You make something that could be better, someone criticises it, sometimes harshly and it stings but then you improve it, become more skilled at what you’re doing and create something better until the feedback is positive.
With nothing but praise and censorship of criticism, things would never improve. Worst case, people become scared of saying anything negative at all and the product/service continually gets away with being subpar
I think our own humility probably encourages us to sugar-coat opinions for fear of hurting someone. Understandably. If someone’s developed a conversation, handed out a free product, excitedly asking you to try it, you’re going to naturally feel uncomfortable saying negative things.
But it is really the only way iteration and improvement can happen.
I think the fact so many of these glitzy large-audience videos start to feel phoney is because there’s very rarely any brutal honesty when things aren’t good.
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