I have a real problem. Not with the concept of always-on, follow-the-sun service, though I wish sometimes that people would remember that a normal one-man company can’t usually offer spontaneous media engagement or 500 instant words on comparative testing at 3.15 in the morning. But I’ve just been reminded of the wretched 24/7/365 construct, and until I get this rant out of the way, I can’t take the document I’m reading with the seriousness it otherwise deserves.
24/7 I get, even if it enrages me when it turns out to mean “24/7 except on public holidays” or “we keep normal hours but we never turn off the website and you can email us any time you like (but there are no response time SLAs)”. Though even then it’s the misuse of the concept that vexes me, not the concept of limited working hours.
24/7/52: all day, every day of every week? Works for me, as long as I’m not on the helpdesk roster.
But every hour of every day of the week of every day of the year? That has all the comprehensibility and grace of a multiple negative wrapped around a split infinitive and 543 grammes of grocer’s apostrophes. And what happened to leap years? Or do you give your staff the day off once every four years?
Exit, humming “for tomorrow may rain so I’ll follow the sun…”
David Harley CITP FBCS CISSP
Senior Research Curmudgeon
Having watched the video it sounds like you just need to “pull a Westlaw” and change the laws of physics. (If I wasn’t so busy, I would have thought of that myself.)
BTW, do you have one of those posters of a kitten in a tree that says “Hang in there!” because I’ve been told those help. :-)
By: Stephen Cobb (@zcobb) on October 9, 2011
at 16:43
I think I feel a screenplay coming on.
By: David Harley on October 9, 2011
at 17:37
Actually, that reminds me of a cat story. But I’ll save that for another blog. :)
By: David Harley on October 9, 2011
at 19:06
[...] Words & Music: 24/7 Ranting [...]
By: Recent writing (5th-9th October) | The Geek Peninsula on October 9, 2011
at 19:45