¶ … Customer Service Applications
Delivered on Social Networks
The impact of social networks on every facet of customer relationships continues to escalate, with more companies using Twitter and Facebook to deliver exceptional customer service experiences by solving their problems quickly, clearly and transparently online (Bernoff, Li, 2008). Social networks are pervasive in their adoption today, with Facebook having more subscribers that some nations have citizens (Woodcock, Green, Starkey, 2011). This has transformed online customer service from simply a Web-based application delivered over a website to an interactive, real-time conversation with customers online (Bernoff, Li, 2008). The intent of this paper is to evaluate how Comcast and other companies in the services industries introduced the new product of online customer service over social networks to their customers, and how these changes made the businesses more profitable and stable as a result. This paper also includes a support plan for customers who choose to use social networks as a means of connecting with companies they are customers of, and also how new technology partners contribute to enhanced customer experiences.
Introducing Online Customer Service on Facebook and Twitter
There are dozens of companies today who have chosen to use social networks as the foundation for automating and improving their customer service strategies online. The greatest benefit of choosing to use social networks as the foundation of automating customer service strategies is their rapid adoption, continual improvements to the user experience, and the build-out of Application Programmer Interfaces (API)s that streamline the application development process (Bernoff, Li, 2008). In addition, social networks have become the foundation for effective change management strategies, as resistance on the part of customers to adopting and using a platform they are very familiar with is lessened over time. In addition to these factors, it is clear that consumers now prefer to rely on social networks over traditional Web-based and offline media channels to gain product information, guidance from their trusted friends on what products or services to buy or not, and most importantly, how to get satisfaction on customer service issues.
AT&T, Comcast, Dell, Starbucks, Southwest Airlines and many others have launched Twitter accounts that are staffed by teams of experience customer service professionals who have the authority to expedite and solve their problems. Of these, Comcast, Dell, Starbucks and Southwest Airlines have also created Facebook applications and Fan pages used for expediting service requests and also passing along reports of positive experiences (Bernoff, Li, 2008). Of these, the most pervasive in its use of social networking-based applications is Starbucks, which has created the online community Starbucks Cares (Bernoff, Li, 2008).
How each of these companies introduced customer service applications on the social network platforms from Twitter and Facebook show how drastically customers' preferences are shifting for how, where and through what applications they choose to be supported online. There are differences however in how manufacturing-based vs. service-based companies introduce customer service applications online as part of their broader Social Customer Relationship Management (SCRM) strategies (Ernst, Hoyer, Kraft, Krieger, 2011). AT&T, Comcast and Southwest Airlines created teams of approximately ten to fifteen people who specifically focused on how to expedite customers' problems throughout their organizations, getting them solved quickly (Bernoff, Li, 2008). These teams were often managed by a director to vice president-level manager who had the experience in customer service to manage non-standard requests. These director and VP-level managers also had the credibility and authority within the company to solve problems fast (Bernoff, Li, 2008). Comcast was acutely aware of how it had failed with its previous efforts to automate customer service had failed in the past, and chose to create process workflows, expedite request strategies, and request routing to solve the complex customer problems they anticipated receiving online. As a result of Comcast committing so much attention to these areas of back-office customer service and CRM integration, their Comcast Cares programs on Facebook...
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