Forum Discussion
"Salatious_Scrum;c-2379294" wrote:
The amount of effort it takes to post that many screenshots onto the forums can easily be spent by just closing the pop up windows and ignoring them…
Presumably, the point of the post is to help convince CG to minimize the use of pop-ups for all of us.
In that context, the time for OP to post a few screenshots pales in comparison to the time we could all collectively save by not having to close a dozen pop ups each day.- I think bringing attention to it as a problem has a slightly higher chance of working compared to staying silent about it.
It’s nice to know that I’m only allowed to buy the Hyperdrive Bundle once. It’s one more than I can actually use, but still, my cat could go on a spree while I’m not looking.
I like the free calendar pop-up the best, since it came up after I had already claimed the calendar, and after several other pop-ups. Even when CG tries to be helpful to the players they can’t be bothered to verify that they actually are.
How to leave feedback in SWGOH:
1. Tap the gear icon
2. Tap Help
3. The bot will give you a menu of options. Tap “General Feedback”
4. At the prompt, type in your feedback
5. Bot will suggest an article on joining a guild, or rebooting your phone
6. Choose “That didn’t help”
7. Wait for C/S rep
8. C/S rep will ask you what your issue is, even though you’ve already typed it in
9. Type in your feedback again
10. A minute later, a different C/S rep is now helping you. They will ignore what you wrote and give you a link to the FAQ page for how to reboot your phone.
11. Tell C/S rep that offering FAQ page isn’t at all helpful, ask why can’t they just scroll back in the history and read what my actual reason for contacting them?
12. A few minutes later, a different C/S rep is now helping you. They ask for your player id.
13. Upload a screen shot of your player id
14. A few minutes later, a different C/S rep is now helping you. They offer the FAQ page for rebooting your phone again.
15. Tell them that if they bothered to read the chat first, they could save everyone a lot of time.
16. The C/S rep from step 8 is back. They ask to verify your player id.
17. Point out that you already did.
18. The C/S rep from step 14 is back. They say they really value your feedback and will most definitely forward it to someone who cares and your feedback really matters and totally makes a difference.
19. Ask what feedback, specifically, they are going to forward, summarized in their own words.
20. The C/S rep from step 8 is back. They offer the FAQ page for rebooting your phone.
21. Go back to step 11.
Easy!- Spoiler
1. Huzzah, the Hyperdrive bundle, which has zero value for me since I’ve maxed out all the characters it offers, is half off! I can donate to CG’s dental plan at 50% the regular amount. Such a bargain.
2. There were 7 (SEVEN!!) Executor pop-ups from today. I have the Executor team maxed out. This just exemplifies the casual disregard CG shows to the players. I didn’t include them above because I had YouTube running PIP on top and didn’t feel like editing it out. So I took the CG alternative: copy-paste! copy-paste! - Spoiler
Another busy day at the pop-up factory. - Here’s some scholarly articles on why pop-up advertising is ineffective:
- Nair, T. (2017). Relevance of E-Permission marketing in today's Digital World. Dostupno na: https://www. researchgate. net/publication/317000220_Relevance_of_EPermission_marketi ng_in_today's_Digital_World.
- https://research.thea.ie/handle/20.500.12065/1060
- https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0747563214006827
This has been known for decades, ever since Al Gore invented the internet in 1999. But business owners keep getting talked into using them by their MBA interns, who run an A/B test and collect some metrics to show that the conversion rate for adding pop-ups is greater than zero. And that is a Good Thing, so the A/B test becomes a new permanent feature. Then those MBA interns use that success to get a paying job elsewhere before anyone notes that the metrics plummet once customers realize that the pop-ups rarely offer them any value and they devise ways to suppress them or just habitually ignore them.
Then the business owner hires another MBA intern, who runs an A/B test that shows that flooding the customer with more pop-ups than before increases the interaction rate by a non-zero amount. The goalposts have been shifted, as “more effective marketing” now means “more people are clicking the buy button” rather than “more people are completing purchases.” Maybe it doesn’t show any proof of revenue growth, but surely that growth will come once they expand the A/B test to a broader audience.And that MBA intern takes that success and gets a better job elsewhere before anyone realizes that most of the growth in “buy” clicks were accidental because the pop-ups keep appearing a split second before the user clicked on their actual target. Maybe they actually had revenue growth, but only if they subtract the surge in customer refund requests.
The annoying interruption caused by opening the blocking App Store purchase confirmation dialog trains users to rapidly tap the corner of the screen to quickly dismiss the pop-ups as fast as possible without triggering an interrupting App Store dialog. Nobody is collecting metrics to see that the average time for viewing a pop-up dropped from 3000 milliseconds to 200 milliseconds. There is no metric for “customers have developed a level of cynicism towards the company such that they actively resist offers to buy stuff in all formats, not just pop-ups, because the pop-ups took away their sense of agency.” No MBA intern wants to risk their resume padding with a story of a time when they ran an A/B test to remove a feature that had shown past revenue growth and then nothing came of it. Their internship won’t last long enough to see the cynicism wear off in their most expensive customers — those hanging around but not buying anything — or to see those cynical customers replaced by new ones who never develop the cynicism because they weren’t inundated with pop-ups.
So the next wave of MBA interns have to figure out a way to discourage customers from successfully getting refunds for accidental purchases. They call this “purchase retention”, or something that sounds nicer than “legally ripped people off.” And on and on… - Nair, T. (2017). Relevance of E-Permission marketing in today's Digital World. Dostupno na: https://www. researchgate. net/publication/317000220_Relevance_of_EPermission_marketi ng_in_today's_Digital_World.
- Spoiler
About 10 a day - Just yesterday I got one while simming for gear. That somehow threw me really off, because normally they don't pop up there.
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