(no subject)
Sep. 28th, 2006 09:07 amDear Nishant:
The only reason we ever had a conference call scheduled in the first place is because you pronounced your company's name in such a way that every single person you spoke to believed you were trying to set up a meeting between our company and a tech VP at Microsoft. When your email came in confirming the conference call with the tech VP of Macrosoft, I was Not Pleased. I did not want to talk to you or the VP.
Then you called when I was in the bathroom and told a coworker you had to reschedule because the 28th was no longer suitable. I told him, when I got back, that we should cancel. He tried, but you hung up on him.
You emailed this morning with 'don't forget the conference call at 9 AM'. I emailed you back to say 'no, we're not, and we told you that last week'.
Also? If you're going to cold-call a place and BS your way into talking to us by pronouncing 'Macrosoft' as if it were 'Microsoft', expect to get an even colder shoulder when you address your emails to Ms. $EXTREMELY_MANGLED_SPELLING_OF_MY_LAST_NAME, rather than Ms. $MY_LAST_NAME.
I ain't talkin' to you. OR to your VP.
The only reason we ever had a conference call scheduled in the first place is because you pronounced your company's name in such a way that every single person you spoke to believed you were trying to set up a meeting between our company and a tech VP at Microsoft. When your email came in confirming the conference call with the tech VP of Macrosoft, I was Not Pleased. I did not want to talk to you or the VP.
Then you called when I was in the bathroom and told a coworker you had to reschedule because the 28th was no longer suitable. I told him, when I got back, that we should cancel. He tried, but you hung up on him.
You emailed this morning with 'don't forget the conference call at 9 AM'. I emailed you back to say 'no, we're not, and we told you that last week'.
Also? If you're going to cold-call a place and BS your way into talking to us by pronouncing 'Macrosoft' as if it were 'Microsoft', expect to get an even colder shoulder when you address your emails to Ms. $EXTREMELY_MANGLED_SPELLING_OF_MY_LAST_NAME, rather than Ms. $MY_LAST_NAME.
I ain't talkin' to you. OR to your VP.
no subject
Date: 2006-09-28 01:23 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-28 01:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-28 01:47 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-29 03:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-29 03:07 pm (UTC)