Wow, it's hard to believe that a single word in the platform could cause this much response, but here we are! I voted twice - once for Title (since I previously suggested that as an option) and again for Request Name (which is perfectly fine). Like most admins, I'd love to customize this term on a per queue basis, but we've gotten this far without that feature, so I don't mind waiting a little longer. I've pulled a report of all new issues entered yesterday. Out of 70 requests, three users entered their own name in the field and the rest followed our naming convention. Ideally it would be zero, but I would not say the sky is falling... I will take this opportunity to share my advice for managing this kind of change:
1. Use your Announcement Center to announce changes! We have a little over 2000 users, most of them requesters. I don't want to send an email to someone who made a single request eight months ago, but I do want to communicate changes to more frequent requesters. So in the People section, I find all users who either haven't logged in more than 3 months, OR have never logged on more than 5 times. I select all, then turn OFF their notification preference for "A message is sent to the Announcement Center." Then I find all users who have logged in at least once during the past month, or more than five times ever. For them, I turn ON their notification preference for the same event. Then, I can send a message to "Everyone" in the Announcement Center describing the changes that are happening, and in this case, it went to about 600 of our 2000 users.
This doesn't solve world peace, but it is a proactive step that will help reduce confusion when presented with change, at least for some users.
2. Preface your custom forms with descriptive text. "Subject" was never a perfect name for the field, so I start forms off with descriptive text that tells the user, "In the 'Subject' field above, please enter the ______________ for this request (where _________ is the ideal name for the field). And, I can add details about the request in general, typical SLA, which documents should be attached, and any other information to help the user correctly submit their request. With this change, all I needed to do is update that descriptive text to say, "In the 'Name' field above, please enter the _________ for this request. (Don't enter your own name, we know who you are üòÄ)"
I know several admins who already takes these steps, and I'm not suggesting they solve this issue entirely; but certainly it helped to restrict the amount of confusion in our instance down to about 4% of requests; where it could have been much higher. William English T-Mobile
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