I'm going to start with the following statement as it seems to be core for you :
This is just simply wrong.
If it were true we wouldn't care for CSAT, CES, NPS, TGW and other similar metrics. If you don't know what they are feel free to google but if that's the case, odds are you aren't knowledgeable enough to make claims on what the real scope of forum feedback is (edit: not meant as an attack, just giving perspective. Also a few metrics don't define customer satisfaction as a whole, but those are a good place to start). The fact is that for every person who voices their opinion on a forum or complain there are x number of people who don't say anything and that are just as dissatisfied. One complaint isn't just that one person, it's a bunch of other people who don't comment but feel the same way. Each industry and type of product will have varying degrees of participation from the community but for some reference numbers, 96% of unhappy customers usually won't complain. So the negative feedback you do get comes with the context that there are a lot of users behind each and every complaint you receive. The ratio of which depends on your other metrics.
There are also such metrics for satisfied customers and if you understand the customer feedback (and service) industry you'll understand how the context of publishing ShB data and getting forum feedback plays into that.
Of course other things need to be considered like CAC, LTV, etc, or complaints deltas over time etc...
The cool kid "vocal minority" gets a bad rap because media likes to cherry pick the most ridiculous and sensational stories. And then we all get a good laugh at how bat s* crazy the "vocal minority" is and how it doesn't represent the people. But that's definitely not how it should be generalized and certainly not what is happening here given the context mentioned above. Forums after an expansion news release acts similarly to a few different feedback channels all in one and should be taken seriously.
Beyond all this there's also what you do with the data and that follows a whole other set of principles. Including game design principles, a couple of which were thrown out the window for ShB healers. (There's way more to product design which I will not get into now)
You originally said way more people would be playing SCH? I don't see how that relates to anything? The only way I made sense of it was if you were referring to all the SCH complaints we currently have somehow reflecting the ratio of SCHs to WHMs to ASTs out there. Which of course isn't true, as you said. Though you implied that what I said somehow entailed this (and for which I will refer you to the above or my previous post as an answer)
There might be a semantics issue here. Healing downtime is everything that essentially isn't a healing cast. So that includes cards, DPS, fairy placement/dissipation/recast, doing mechanics, etc.
To the argument that you only use them every now and then. That's exactly what the SCH skills that were pruned provided. Shadowflare was once every 60s, ED on average I would say was once every 45s for the demanding content, obviously more often if you had less to heal and/or were optimized. Not that different from cards.
In addition this allowed the dps gameplay to not suffer any clipping and/or missed weaving opportunities. AST still has these options because of the malefic cast time and cards.
Also my numbers come from FFXIV census (Statistics for May 2019, "Active" character classes)
And are CNJ vs SCH vs AST so no they don't mix up SCH and SMN.
Also worth noting your numbers don't look right considering fflogs alone has 40k healers clearing some alphascape before echo in standard comp (13k of which are WHM). To which you need to add all those that did it after the echo or with a non standard comp, didn't parse or are hidden, those that got their eureka weapon, those that cleared the last two ex trials (50k healers before echo with standard comp on Seryu) and those that just made a crafted weapon.



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