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Showing newest posts with label Twitter. Show older posts
Showing newest posts with label Twitter. Show older posts

Twitter and customer service #2

Another customer service story where twitter helped in complaint resolution.

As I have mentioned in an earlier post, twitter is an excellent customer service tool and usually, the response is prompt. A major reason for this is that the organizations fear that bad word of mouth will spread faster as followers tend to spread news faster than expected.

Another reason is that it is being used as a new medium for interacting with customers and hence, top honchos are monitoring its regular performance. Spotlight is on experiments happening via social media tools. Some companies have integrated these with their overall marketing strategy but most of the organizations are still experimenting with these new found toys.

Twitter is also cheaper to implement as service is free and all you need is someone who can monitor it regularly. But the big question is, whether the person monitoring servetweets (my short for customer service tweets) is trying to know about customers. Is he trying to strike meaningful conversation with customer? Is he trying enough to engage with customer so that a long lasting relationship can be build? Or he is just trying to maintain his SLAs of answering maximum tweets in a minute?

Call centers also failed to engage with customers. Initially, call centers had fair amount of success in resolving customer complaints and reducing costs. But it failed where it mattered most. Building relationships. Moreover, once processes set in and call centers become a 'customer service must' for every organization, they were the biggest reason for dissatisfied customers.

As I have argued earlier, once process sets in, servetweets will also stop bearing satisfactory results. One should also understand that as expectations from servetweets are growing, it will be hard for teams managing servetweets to fulfill expectations. They are bound to feel the pressure and lets hope they do not crumble under pressure.

It is a matter of time before we start hearing complaints via twitter going unanswered as well.

Anyways, just remember you heard this first over here.

Shame on you


Read this tweet yeasterday. I assume this is from a customer service representative.

This is sad. I am sure nobody is forcing this guy to work in customer service department. He can always quit and work in some other cool and relaxed job where he won't be bothered by customers on his holiday. Shame on you for bringing bad name to your employer.

I will never like to work with people like him.

Twitter and customer service



You have a complaint against a brand or service. You tried contacting customer service but nothing happened. You wrote an email to customer service department but nothing happened. You sent a reminder but it did not help much. And you feel helpless, dissatisfied with this 'take it or leave it' attitude of companies. But hey, wait. Help is pouring in from new channel. Twitter. 

More and more number of people are using Twitter to register their complaints. Good thing is that they are getting responses and resolutions from their service providers. And Help pours in faster. 

Article in NY Times reports 

As hotels, airlines and other travel companies line up on Twitter to promote their brands, customers who voice their grievances in the form of tweets are getting surprisingly fast responses for everything from bad airplane seats to poor room service.
  
More and more number of brands have started using Twitter to promote their promotions, to connect better with customers and to monitor conversations. Since they are on it, they are also able to hear positive and negative feedback about their service and brand.     

Reason cited for this kind of service is viral nature of Twitter. Every Twitterer (I think I invented this word) worth his salt has some number of followers to whom they retweet their grievance and thus bad word spreads. They not only get help but they get it in record time. On one instance, a person spent 30 minutes on phone with call centre representative but no resolution provided. After that he tweeted his concern and he got resolution in 19 minutes! 

It is sad to see that after spending huge amount of money on call centre technologies, buying best of CRM systems, hiring best of the customer service representatives and building state of the art offices, companies prefer to put their efficiencies behind a free service.

Is Twitter going to revolutionize customer service? I do not think so. Right now it is new tool and most of the companies are testing waters. In most of the companies it is in a project stage where it is being monitored by marketing directors, customer service heads and hence faster responses. Once a process sets in, it will follow the path treaded by other high profile technologies. And customers have to find a new way to resolve their complaints. 

Till then, as they say, make hay while the sun shines.  What is your take? 


Twitter comes with risks

My yesterday's post was on advantages which Twitter offers to small businesses. They are tremendous and lot businesses are lapping it up.

But there are some risks attached in using Twitter. According to me, they are

No Revenue Model :- Yes, you read it right. Twitter do not have any revenue model. It has huge audiences. Celebrities are endorsing it. VCs are gung ho about it. But Twitter has yet to think how they will earn money. This is a risky proposition for you. If Twitter is a tool around which your marketing, CRM, branding strategies revolve, you have to be careful. Keep your plan B ready.

It is free :- If free is an advantage then it is also big risk. Email is personal and free just like Twitter. Email is free and it is spammed with offers which you have never opened, mails which you never intend to open. Already there are thousands of unwanted tweets which one recieves but do not intend to recieve.  Needless to say such tweets go unnoticed. Free things can be abused. Businesses need to be careful and Twitter should be used judiciously and everyone's privacy should be respected.

Defunct rate is high :-   Nielson reported that 60% of Twitter users leave it after trying it for one month. Well, this is HIGH rate of attrition. Users do not announce before leaving this platform and they just stop using it. You spent some productive time in building relationships, initiating conversations with your prospective customers and you do not want that effort go down the drain.

I am not saying Twitter should not be used for your business but I am suggesting that strategy should not be built around Twitter. Use Twitter as tool and make it a one of the pillars of your success.

But have your plan B ready.

Twitter as marketing tool

In last six months many companies especially smaller ones have started using Twitter actively for marketing, CRM, building relationships with clients and customers. Twitter is fast emerging a great marketing tool for small businesses.

Now, companies are going a step further. They are tracking their RoI on their marketing efforts on Twitter. It has not happened so far but now companies want to check the effectiveness of their marketing efforts from Twitter.

Twitter has many advantages because of which small, local and medium businesses are using it. Biggest of all is, it is free. At no cost, you can pull up a huge marketing campaign.  It is easy to use. I would say extremely easy. Few clicks and you are ready to go. It has audience. Well, 10 million and still counting. Micro blogging site, Twitter started slowly but picked up and in February they have more than 10 million users. And according to one report, it is not only youngsters who are driving this growth but middle aged also using this micro blogging site wit great zeal. Entry barriers are negligible.

All you need is an art to use it effectively. Art to communicate, art to initiate interesting conversations, art to build relationships, art to track conversations around your brand and respond to customers. It is easier said than done but companies are trying.

PS - There are some risks attached which I will discuss in my next post, so stay tuned.