You Can't Hide Bad Customer Service
Social Networks Share Customer Complaints With the World..
Never before has timing been as critical to an organization’s success as it is today.
While it certainly is critical to, for example, the
introduction of a new product or the infusion of cash, it is
equally critical when it comes to solving a customer’s problem.
Technology - specifically social networks - has driven the need
for timely customer complaint solutions to a new high.
Those networks have put businesses throughout the world under a technological microscope.
Disgruntled customers share their experiences with thousands, if
not millions of people, in a matter of seconds with a simple
click of a button.
In the past, customers who had a problem with a company would
tell, on average, 20 of their friends, co-workers, and family
members about it. Social networks, however, allow anyone
anywhere to share their customer service complaints quickly and
with people in every corner of the globe.
The power and appeal of social networks is undeniable. Consider
this: More than 800 million people are active users of Facebook,
and each of them has an average of 130 friends.
More than 350 million of those users access Facebook through
mobile devices such as cell phones, which means they are in
touch with their friends even while they’re on the go.
What do those numbers mean to you and your organization? It
means that, if one of your customers has a problem, and you
don’t solve that problem quickly, that customer can - and
probably will - blast you to hundreds, if not thousands, of
friends. And their comments and complaints often remain on
social network sites for years.
Let me give you an example: When United Airlines broke a
passenger’s guitar in 2009, that passenger put a posting about
it on YouTube. It’s still there - and it has had almost 11
million hits.
Another YouTube video, posted in 2006, involves a Comcast
technician, who fell asleep on the customer’s couch while he was
on hold for an hour with the company’s central office. That
video has had almost 1.7 million hits.
Consumers of all ages are increasingly turning to social network
sites before they make decisions on where to spend their money.
My daughter Christina is 31 and lives in China. Before my wife
Pat and I visit her, she logs onto various social network sites
to check out hotels and restaurants for us.
My friend, Vicki, is 62 and uses Google - which has 1 billion
visitors each month - to be directed to sites, including Trip
Advisor, that provide customer reviews on hotels before she
finalizes her travel plans.
You can spend millions of dollars on advertising and marketing,
but if you don’t solve your customers’ problems, you will suffer
bad publicity that will cost you millions more in the loss of
potential customers.
You no longer have the luxury of waiting a few days or a week
to handle a customer’s complaint; you must do it within a matter
of minutes.
That means you must empower your frontline employees to do whatever it takes to satisfy your customers. If you don’t, your sales, along with your chances of survival, will plummet.
About the Author
John Tschohl, the internationally recognized service strategist, is founder and president of the Service Quality Institute in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Described by USA Today, Time, and Entrepreneur as a "customer service guru," he has written several books on customer service and has developed more than 26 customer-service training programs that have been distributed throughout the world. John’s monthly strategic newsletter is available online. Info: www.customer-service.com.

