Mike Frichol offers the following royalty-free article for you to publish 
online or in print.
Feel free to use this article in your newsletter, website, ezine, blog, or 
forum.
-----------
PUBLICATION GUIDELINES
- You have permission to publish this article for free providing the "About the 
Author" box is included in its entirety.
- Do not post/reprint this article in any site or publication that contains 
hate, violence, porn, warez, or supports illegal activity.
- Do not use this article in violation of the US CAN-SPAM Act. If sent by 
email, this article must be delivered to opt-in subscribers only.
- If you publish this article in a format that supports linking, please ensure 
that all URLs and email addresses are active links.
- Please send a copy of the publication, or an email indicating the URL to 
[email protected]
- Article Marketer (www.ArticleMarketer.com) has distributed this article on 
behalf of the author. Article Marketer does not own this article, please 
respect the author's copyright and publication guidelines. If you do not agree 
to these terms, please do not use this article.
-----------
Article Title: Managing Your Online Reputation
Author: Mike Frichol
Category: Internet Marketing, Public Relations, Customer Service
Word Count: 985
Keywords: social media,customer service,reputation,complaints
Author's Email Address: [email protected]
Article Source: http://www.articlemarketer.com
------------------ ARTICLE START ------------------

Regardless of the size of your business and whether or not you or your business 
participate in social media, you need to pay attention to what is happening in 
the social media world.  You can no longer bury customer complaints and 
problems in the bowels of your service department.

Customers and prospective buyers have unprecedented access to increasingly 
powerful social media tools such as YouTube, Twitter, FaceBook, Forums, Blogs, 
Rating Sites, and more, to express their frustrations and dissatisfaction with 
lousy services and products.

There are new reports every week of customer service and/or PR debacles for 
businesses caused by their own poor or indifferent response to customer 
problems and complaints.  Companies that don't pay attention to what their 
customers are saying about their business/brands/products/services/solutions 
via social media sites pay a serious penalty in bad publicity and lost revenues.

Your business/brands/products/services/solutions reputation is open to positive 
and negative social media discussion online.  This is your reputation - you 
need to be engaged - you need to monitor what's going on - you need to respond 
appropriately.

The first step is to monitor who is saying what related to your business, 
brands, products, services, solutions or other business properties.  The 
easiest way to do this is to setup Google Alerts [http://www.google.com/alerts] 
to monitor any activity for each term of interest.  Choose the 'Comprehensive' 
search type and have it delivered 'as-it-happens' to an email address you check 
regularly.  Although this is a good automated, no cost monitoring service; I 
recommend doing direct searches on various social media sites on a periodic 
basis - depends on the frequency of post incidents for your business.

Once you find a post, do a quick and careful analysis of the situation:
* If it's positive, thank the customer for the comment.  If you want to reward 
them with a coupon or discount do it privately not to set a precedent for 
everyone to comment just to get a reward.  If it's negative, continue reading...
* Get the facts and reading of the situation from both sides.  Listen without 
being defensive no matter how harsh the criticism.
* Assess the situation - there are different degrees of negativity.
* Get an unbiased view from a neutral 3rd party if necessary.  Sometimes you're 
too close to the situation to objectively interpret the intended message of the 
comment.
* Check whether this person has posted other complaints elsewhere.  There are 
some constant complainers and angry people out there.  Do a search on their 
name or alias to get as much information about them as you can - make sure you 
understand who you're dealing with.
* Get agreement and ensure everyone knows and understands how you will respond 
and the ideal final resolution you wish to accomplish.

Now you're ready to respond:
* Be ready and be quick - don't exacerbate the problem by letting the comment 
sit out there for more than a few hours without a good resolution.  Other 
Internet users will see it.
* If you don't have the definitive answer immediately, respond anyway that 
you're aware of their comment and you're checking the situation to get back to 
them ASAP.
* Before you reply, remember that you are replying to the social media world, 
not just the complainant - be professional and use regular, moderated language.
* Stay calm, be sincere and don't get into petty arguments.  Rise above any bad 
language or baiting from the complainer.  Sometimes the complainer wants to 
make you look like a jerk - don't get sucked into their agenda.
* If it just requires clarification of a misunderstanding, step in and explain.
* If your business screwed up in any way - make amends in the best possible 
manner.  Bite the bullet for a replacement or refund if needed - it costs much 
less than the bad publicity and potential for lost revenues.
* If the customer has buyer's remorse or they screwed it up - try to resolve it 
in the most amicable manner for the customer.  Even though they may be annoyed, 
you can turn them into a fan with a good resolution.
* Respond quickly, fairly and decisively - don't let it drag on for others to 
pile on with "me too" supporting comments.
* Once resolved, end the discussion with 3 take-aways:
  1. Thank them for bringing this to your attention.
  2. Offer them an alternate route to get this type of issue resolved directly 
with your company if it should happen again.  That way, you avoid the whole 
social media rigmarole for future incidents.
  3. Promise to do better - whatever is relevant for the situation.

Taking action for your business:
* Regardless of your personal social media participation or opinion, you cannot 
disregard social media conversations about your 
business/brands/products/services/solutions.
* Develop a social media monitoring and response plan for your business 
incorporating relevant points discussed above.  Communicate it to everyone in 
your company - not just service staff.
* Develop a crisis plan if things go wrong and the problem escalates.  You need 
to respond and resolve the problem before someone makes a video.
* Educate everyone in your company on the importance of good customer service, 
the ramifications of indifferent service, and everyone's customer service role.
* Don't let these situations fester - respond quickly and resolutely.
* Develop consistent messaging that everyone in your company follows for 
communicating with customers.
* Minimize PR and reputation damage.  You may have to offer a resolution that 
you're not entirely comfortable with.  Bite the bullet and minimize the damage.
* Use the opportunity to respond and resolve in a manner that will turn the 
dialog into a favorable experience for others to read.
* Treat every incident as a learning experience to communicate with everyone in 
your company.

Social media is an integral part of your customer communications environment.  
All businesses need to pay attention and proactively manage their reputation in 
the social media world.

Mike Frichol is founder and principal of Marketance (http://marketance.com/) 
which provides advice, guidance and tutorials for businesses to get more 
customers and sales with Internet Marketing. Their free weekly newsletter helps 
businesses get better results from marketing on the Internet.
------------------ ARTICLE END ------------------



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Reply via email to