this post was submitted on 29 May 2025
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Science Memes

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[โ€“] lime@feddit.nu 180 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (22 children)

i see this all the time with software designed by americans. on an old job we used a tool called "officevibe" where you'd enter your current impression of your role and workplace once a month. you got some random questions to answer on a 10-degree scale.

when we were presented with the result the stats were terrible because the scale was weighted so that everything below 7 was counted as negative. we were all just answering 5 for "it's okay", 3-4 for "could use improvement", and 6-7 for "better than expected". there had never been a 10 in the stats, and the software took that as "this place sucks".

like, of course you downvote a bad response. you're supposed to help the model get better, right?

[โ€“] Ethalis@jlai.lu 15 points 1 month ago

From the looks of it, what they're calculating is a net promoter score. The idea is that, in some context, what you actually want to know is whether your target audience would be willing to actually promote your business to their friends and family or not.

It's very common in retail and other competitive markets, because a customer that had an "okay" experience could still go to a competitor, so only customers who had a great experience (7+ out of ten) are actually loyal, returning clients.

Don't know if that's the best method to gather impressions on workplace environment though, I don't think many people would consider their workplace "amazing"

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