These days
disgruntled customers can vent their spleen on social media instantly, but many
companies are not handling these platforms properly, experts say. So what are
the dos and don'ts of social media customer relations?
There are
days when you get angry about how a company has treated you, there only seems
to be one way to make it right.
Take to
Twitter.
Voicing a
grievance on a company's public feed has become the main way to get your
complaint heard. Right now.
"Somehow
Twitter has become the channel for people that are really [expletive] off with
an organisation," says Lyndsay Menzies, chief executive of digital
marketing agency 8 Million Stories (8MS), which advises on managing social
media.
And Twitter's
immediacy has led customers to think they should receive answers equally
quickly, thinks Ms Menzies.
"It's
made consumers much more demanding in terms of what they want and expect."
It received
around 64,000 likes.
But many
companies are failing to manage their social interactions well, believes Ms
Menzies, largely because they feel the pressure to be on all platforms all the
time.
The weight of
this burden became apparent early this year when pub chain Wetherspoons said it
was shutting down its social media channels as they were a
"distraction" for its staff.
Wetherspoon
pub chain quits social media
And this
risks confusing customers with scattered, inconsistent messaging.
Wayne
Guthrie, co-founder of the Fearlessly Frank digital consultancy, believes
social media should not be seen as just another channel through which to send
messages.
"Social
media is about behaviour, not communication," he says.
Organisations
need to show customers what they're doing, not just tell them. For instance, if
a customer's order goes astray, the social media dialogue about the incident
should show what the company has done to resolve the problem.
"It
should be used to make a customer feel like an organisation is really doing
something on their behalf," he says.
But this is
no easy task, as firms have to gather and pass on information quickly - being
open and transparent takes commitment and resources, he observes.
Flowers-through-the-post
firm Bloom & Wild is one company that has tried to live up to the
expectations of social media, says Isobel Murray, the firm's "head of
customer delight".
Social media
should be about building relationships with customers, she argues.
"We want
to make it easy and appealing for anyone to get in touch with us, and social
media provides a great way to do this," she says.
"It's
where people spend lots of their time and it's great to meet them where they
are."
The same
staff work on all Bloom & Wild's social media accounts so the tone and
personality of the messages stays consistent, she adds.
And this
consistency of brand personality across all channels is crucial, argues Ms
Menzies.
"One of
the things that annoys people is the different types of voice companies have in
different areas," she says.
Businesses
"need to think about what they are as a brand and what their business
does" before taking to social media, she advises.
Once the
brand values and personality have been carefully worked out and agreed, they
can then be communicated to staff handling the different channels and
interacting with customers.
And this
openness and consistency of tone should apply as much when things are going
badly as when they're going well, says Bloom & Wild's Ms Murray.
"We
never want to be defensive or ignore a problem," she says. "We want
to hear from every customer - to celebrate their joys but also quickly put
right anything that's gone wrong."
Getting
social media right is tough for technical reasons, too, says Jack Barmby, chief
executive of customer management software firm Gnattr.
This is
partly because most of the apps, sites and networks are designed for
individuals not businesses, he believes.
"Businesses
have had to hijack social media channels, and that's meant putting square pegs
in round holes and trying to adapt them to their purposes," he says.
One example
of this was Instagram letting its commercial users tag items in shared images
so people could buy them. This helped firms sell stuff but didn't give them a
way to respond to customer queries about the featured items.
The world of
social media got a little easier to navigate earlier this year when WhatsApp
released tools that let brands talk directly to customers through the app.
But for a
long time it has been tough for firms to interact with customers via these
other, popular, social media channels.
Small wonder
then that people resort to Twitter when they are cross and have a point to
make.
The irony is
that the huge amount of information people share via their social media
profiles, apps, chat groups and blogs gives companies a golden opportunity to
know much more about their customers and target them with much more specific messaging.
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