You know, it’s a real trip trying to figure out what genuinely gets under people’s skin. You can have the best intentions, lay out what you think is a foolproof plan, and then it just… flops. Or worse, people actively push back. I’ve been there, more than once, and it’s taught me a thing or two about what folks truly dislike.

My Grand Plan and the Great Wall of Nope
I remember this one time, I was part of this local community project. We were all volunteers, passionate, but man, our coordination was a mess. Emails flying everywhere, missed messages, people showing up at the wrong times. Classic chaos. So, I thought, I’ve got this! I’m gonna bring us into the 21st century. I’d found this supposedly simple project management app, free version, looked slick. The idea was to have one central place for tasks, schedules, updates. Easy peasy, right?
I spent a whole weekend tinkering with it. I set up the project, created templates, even made a short video tutorial showing how to use it. I was pretty proud, honestly. I rolled it out at our next meeting, all smiles and enthusiasm. “This is going to save us so much time! No more confusion!”
The reaction? Crickets. Then, a slow, hesitant trickle of “ums” and “ahs.” It wasn’t the standing ovation I’d pictured. Over the next week, it became clear that my brilliant solution was, in fact, something a lot of people disliked. Vehemently.
So, What Went Wrong? Why the Hate?
It wasn’t just one thing. It was a whole cocktail of dislikes. And I learned this not because they sat me down for a polite feedback session. Oh no. I learned it through the grapevine, through the awkward silences, through people just… not using the darn thing. Here’s what I eventually pieced together:
- The “Not Another App” Fatigue: Turns out, many folks were just tired. Tired of new logins, new interfaces, new things to learn. One older gentleman, bless his heart, said to me, “Son, I have my notebook. It’s worked for 50 years. Why do I need this… this ‘cloud’ thing?” He wasn’t being difficult; he was just overwhelmed.
- Loss of Personal Touch: Some people actually missed the slightly chaotic email chains and the quick phone calls. They felt the app was too impersonal. For them, our messy system involved talking to each other. This new way felt like talking to a machine.
- Fear of the Unknown (and Being Tracked): A couple of members were genuinely suspicious. “Where is this data going? Who else can see it?” My reassurances about privacy settings didn’t quite land. They disliked the feeling of being monitored, even if it was just for scheduling volunteer work.
- The “If It Ain’t Broke” Mentality: For a surprising number of people, the old system, for all its flaws, was familiar. They knew how to work around its quirks. My new system, while “efficient” in my eyes, was an unknown quantity that disrupted their comfort zone. They disliked change for change’s sake, especially when they didn’t feel the “problem” was that big to begin with.
- Feeling Dictated To: This was a big one, I think. I’d presented it as a done deal. “Here it is, let’s use it!” I didn’t really involve them in the decision-making or even in identifying the problem from their perspective. People dislike feeling like they have no say, like solutions are imposed on them.
Basically, I bulldozed them with my good intentions. I was so focused on the technical solution, the “efficiency,” that I completely missed the human side of the equation. They didn’t just dislike the app; they disliked how the change made them feel: ignored, incompetent, or controlled.

What did we do? Well, the fancy app died a quiet death. We ended up with a slightly more organized shared document and a whiteboard. Not revolutionary. But people used it. And they talked to each other. The grumbling mostly stopped.
That whole experience was a tough pill to swallow for my enthusiastic self back then. But it taught me a massive lesson. When you’re trying to introduce something new, or change something, the “thing” itself is only half the battle. The other half, the bigger half maybe, is understanding the existing habits, fears, and feelings of the people involved. People dislike things that make them feel small, stupid, or powerless. And no amount of slick features can fix that.
So yeah, when I think about “things people dislike,” I don’t just think about bad products or annoying services. I think about that community project, and the faces of those people. It’s a good reminder to slow down, listen more, and maybe keep the bulldozers parked.