Queue abandonment

On the eve of a gaming console release or the drop of a new pair of Yeezys, crowds queue on side walks and browsers for the chance to be among the first to snag the goods.

The emergence of a queue indicates an impressive heightened tolerance for friction: enough people are willing to put grievances over supply chain scarcity (sometimes intentional) aside and wait for the good or service in anticipation of coming into contact with its purported value (often a mixture of social and practical). 

As impressive as the formation of a queue is though, it also generates a new kind of vulnerability in the form of queue abandonment: getting into a line means you can leave the line, adding to the cart creates the option to abandon the cart, subscribers can unsubscribe. 

There’s at least a few reasons for queue abandonment: 

  1. Mismanaged expectations: the wait time is longer than what was communicated by an intolerable factor — the infamous 30-minute-5-minute wait. 
  2. Reevaluation: the customer decides that their time is actually worth more than the value that the solution purports to offer. 
  3. Other enticing options in the periphery: a suitable alternative becomes available. 

When shipping work to create a change, mind the queue: communicate an accurate delivery window, reaffirm the impact you expect the work to have, and acknowledge the other work out there because you’re delivering to an ecosystem not a vacuum. 

Another to add to potential reason for queue abandonment. The hypnosis of their fantasy evaporates.
2021-02-24 18:28:33
I like that. There's a half-life to hypnosis.

williamliao
will you write about productivity sludge for tomorrow's post?

2021-02-24 18:50:22
And when you do keep in mind local and global scopes of productivity sludge.

As in if you could solve something really quick in a phone call... that might be reduced sludge for you the caller. but then there might be added sludge to the person being called. of course unless it's obvious that the two of you are going back and forth in horribly written emails LOL
2021-02-24 18:51:31
brianball
yes, very good point! And 
abrahamKim
I like the description 'half life of hypnosis'. I've fallen prey this. Although i suppose snapping out of it before committing is a kind of gift, so maybe 'prey' isn't the right word.

2021-02-25 16:25:14