Monday, October 25, 2010
At FeedBlitz we try to excel at customer service - see my favorites feed. We use these techniques daily (just like we do the Six Twitter Sales Tips) to make sure our clients get the help they need when they need it. Field tested, customer approved!
How to get it:
How to get it:
Firstly, some problems aren't easily solved in a couple of 140 characters or less; email can be a much better venue for problems that aren't readily solved over Twitter. It's OK to ask someone to contact support at yourdomain dot com, or to ask for a follow to use DMs instead (follow them first!).
Secondly, if someone's reached for Twitter first instead of emailing you directly, it might already be too late. Don't start a spat in public if you can avoid it; if you can get someone who's unhappy offline where you can address their issues that can really work out well. BUT ... do follow up in public where possible, even if it's to gracefully say "I'm sorry we couldn't solve your problem in the end." More often than not your potentially hostile client will say "thanks for trying" and the crisis is averted.
How to get it: Wrap up the interactions with a "Glad we could help" or "Thank You" tweet. Ask if you can help more. Basic stuff, but still incredibly effective.
Here's where we started. Yikes!
I engaged with the user, got them going, and, four hours later, was rewarded with this:
And now Mani's "fan" tweet is in my real-time testimonials feed, helping our sales efforts.
Good luck with your efforts! By the way, if you liked this post, click here to read my related post on using Twitter for sales and revenue generation.
1. Monitor Your Brand with Twitter Search
What you get: Real-time intelligence on customer, product and brand issues.How to get it:
- Tune a search query using Twitter's real-time search at http://search.twitter.com/
- Plug the search query into your favorite Twitter client.
- Watch for the conversations and mentions.
2. Engage with readers, customers and clients
What you get: The ability to make unhappy clients happy and to stop small problems becoming larger crises.How to get it:
- Directly @reply the author of the tweet
- Be polite e.g. "sorry to hear that, here's what you need to do"
- Solve the problem as quickly as possible (d'oh, right?)
- Don't be afraid to take the conversation off-Twitter
Firstly, some problems aren't easily solved in a couple of 140 characters or less; email can be a much better venue for problems that aren't readily solved over Twitter. It's OK to ask someone to contact support at yourdomain dot com, or to ask for a follow to use DMs instead (follow them first!).
Secondly, if someone's reached for Twitter first instead of emailing you directly, it might already be too late. Don't start a spat in public if you can avoid it; if you can get someone who's unhappy offline where you can address their issues that can really work out well. BUT ... do follow up in public where possible, even if it's to gracefully say "I'm sorry we couldn't solve your problem in the end." More often than not your potentially hostile client will say "thanks for trying" and the crisis is averted.
3. Follow up!
What you get: Closure and chance to create a fan.How to get it: Wrap up the interactions with a "Glad we could help" or "Thank You" tweet. Ask if you can help more. Basic stuff, but still incredibly effective.
Key Resource: Knowledge Base / FAQs
For common questions it's so much faster, easier and effective to tweet a link to the relevant article online. For traditional bloggers, this might be a link to your most popular posts, or your recipe database, or your blogroll.Case Study - From "Hate" to "Fan" in Four Hours Flat!
Let's take a look at how this played out in real life; this was a set of interactions from October 6th, 2010.Here's where we started. Yikes!
Hello feedblitz: I hate you right now.
I engaged with the user, got them going, and, four hours later, was rewarded with this:
@phollows ok. figured it all out! i thank you for your personal care and attention to detail! feeblitz, i'm now a fan :)
And now Mani's "fan" tweet is in my real-time testimonials feed, helping our sales efforts.
Good luck with your efforts! By the way, if you liked this post, click here to read my related post on using Twitter for sales and revenue generation.
Labels: customer service, small business, twitter
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2 Comments:
That is great.
Here is an example of @blogtalkradio addressing a customer response matter that I initiated from my own Twitter account:
http://twitter.com/yhurg/status/27852914213
http://twitter.com/blogtalkradio/status/27856974219
http://twitter.com/yhurg/status/27862725841
They called and sorted it out. Apparently it was a glitch in their advertising system and she was documenting occurrences of reported issues.
The Result - http://twitter.com/blogtalkradio/status/27864865622
Very cool, Ryan! Another proof point of how Twitter can be used to deliver customer service and turn potential problems around quickly and effectively.
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