Should you care if some irate client complains on Twitter that he wasn’t happy with your service? After all he only has a few followers. Most people look askance when you ask them if they blog, or tweet. What’s a tweet ?, is a common question I get. According to Forrester most people are really not engaged all that much across any social media channel. So does it really matter? Here is a great example of when the power of publishing is put into the hands of a disgruntled customer. Apparently United Airlines broke this guy’s guitar and according to him after a year of going round, and round they refused to replace/repair or fix it. Being a creative chap with creative friends he did a “protest” video, and put it on You Tube. Well 550K views later, after being picked up on national news broadcasts United’s brand is taking a hit in the world of web 2.0 and beyond and is being positioned by a single individual as “The Brand that Breaks Guitars”.
Should brands care when people complain in social media? Granted there are only a few of us who are active and make our voices heard across social media channels. @Delatsucks tweeted that “Last Delta representative I spoke with literally said, "We do not care about social media. It has no impact on our business model."
Well social media may not have a direct impact on your ability to sell tickets and fly planes, but it can and will have an ever increasing impact on your brand, and that does have a direct impact on your business model. The change today is that a single individual could conceivably position your brand to millions of prospective customers without your knowing or control. Does United really want to be positioned across 550K people (& growing every second) that it is the airline that breaks guitars?
Perhaps the guitar carrying segment is fairly small and would have a negligible impact on United. However what about the larger population who could be influenced to think about United as a company that does not provide good customer service, or cares very little about its customer. Would United care about that?
The real question is does any brand care when anyone complains regardless of communication channel, and are they authentic in their desire to resolve the issue in a fair and amendable manner. This directly relates to the brand experience the company wants to create. In today’s environment companies big and small must take into account the frictionless word of mouth communication era that we live in, where there is unlimited publishing capacity for creative individuals. Today’s brands must begin to view complaints as an opportunity to engage and build a positive brand experience. Just as the age old adage goes” I’d rather know when someone is unhappy versus not knowing, and then I can do something about it. Nuff said.
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