That's really my point. No one individual person makes a difference and can change things in a specific way. Only by combining all voices together can people as a collective inspire WotC to change their decisions. But even then, they may change, but it will be a change to something they are comfortable with, not a change that any one specific individual has put forth.Well, that's not really true. Our collected feelings on their prospective changes to the OGL mattered. They walked back form the precipice. They have not then gone to the exact places some folks wanted, but they did step back.
That may be in part because we were largely united in the "No!", but not united in the "Do this instead" portion of our collected reaction.
Which is why a person saying that WotC has lost their business until X thing happens is a waste of breath. Because even if by some chance WotC does change, it will virtually never be in the way that one person wants.
It's exactly like how the playtests went. If a singular person hated some potential rule, all they could do was add their voice to the collective tens of thousands of people saying "don't use this", but their individual feeling did not matter. Because even if the person did not submit their survey, the results that came out of it would have been the same.
So if a person makes a choice for themselves, that's cool. But they shouldn't ever think their individual voice has impact. It doesn't. Only when the voice joins in on the chorus can it be a part of the giant group that sees * something * happen. But nothing specific to them.