6 Sept 2022, 12:53

@Hans-van-de-Ven-MRA-Master
@Nick-Carthew

Dear both,

You are both very involved in MRA development, its history and evolution. For you it's a passion, and you are seated first row to see all the very hard work of the development team, share the successes and disapointments, and are excited how your idea's become reality. I also have the highest respect for your dedication to helping users.

Even when you are not MRA staff (I think) you are at least "hard core professional fans" and there is absolutely nothing wrong with that. Within that context I fully understand that you are tempted to always defend MRA. It's only human to side whith those you love. Unfortunately, you are NOT always doing MRA a favour with this approach.

When Jack states that MRA starts having too many options for most users, he doesn't do that to stupidly crisicise, he does that because he has reasons to be concerned. Also when he points to his experience with MRA to question the future "next". The same applies to Christopher who picked up on this old thread from Gary France, and actually the same applies to myself.

When looking at user comments (and from relevant experience working on the IT side) you should always have the following mindset (I often failed in this myself):

THE USER IS ALWAYS RIGHT
EVEN WHEN THE USER IS WRONG, THE USER IS STILL ALWAYS RIGHT

When judging user comments you must bear in mind that this user is NOT aware of the inner circle knowledge that you have, and is therefore often unable to accurately pinpoint to the CAUSE of the problem, as the user can only describe the EFFECT that this unknown cause has. This does not make these effects less real and as developer you better take them into account or the user is going to vote with his/her feet.

For instance, Jack his comment "it has become a bit like MS Word. Years ago, that had enough features for 75% of the users. Nowadays it has been developed so far that 75% of the features are not used and confuse most users" doesn't necessarily mean that there are too many features, it perhaps means that the user interface is not good enough to hide complexities not relevant to novice users. A user interface that allows users to gradually discover features when their expertise in the tool grows. He definitively did not make his comment with the intention to be unfair.

Over time, MRA has lost significant users such as Gary France organising and guiding full time motorcycle travels (talking about a potential ambassador), or PAD-0 pointing continuously towards certain problems. At some point I was myself at the edge of leaving despite having a lifetime gold membership.

All for the same reason: we have too often the feeling that our input is dismissed. You may write 1000 times that "MRA not only listens to the RouteXperts but to all members." but we experience another reality, e.g. that a roadmap made on basis of user input was silently abandonned only a few months after it was published, or that a support ticket remains unanswered during a year. Just try to remain motivated to contribute under those conditions.

In another post I wrote "we should understand that MRA is working following the hobby club approach and development is guided by the spur of the moment interest". You may disagree but this may well be the origin of the "I signed up ... in 2015 ... Since then it has been road maps, promises and delays, flakey performance and ultimately disappointment.". My experience, too some extend, is exactly the same.

The solid basis of the tool (Tyre) and the brilliance of the developers has delivered a very good routeplanner, and I hope that NEXT will do the same to the navigator, but aside from that brilliance there seem to be aspects of MRA that that are a total mess. MRA seems a bit of a hobby club, a bit of a routeplanner, a bit of a navigator, a bit of a social platform, a bit of a quiz environment, perhaps in future after the iron curtain trail a bit of a travel agency ... Jack of all trades, master in none?

It is definitively true that MRA has progressed enormously since 2015. Maybe it is time to translate that growth in a more professional approach for some aspects of managing an internet business?

Again, I am only a user, I know very little, I am just describing my observations with constructive intentions, and without any intention to offend or hurt anyone.

And all this against the background of what is essentially a good product that I love so much that I want it to become even better...