Presented by Jay Badenhope of Intuit at Call Center Week in Las Vegas, NV, on June 16, 2011. This talk addresses the role of customer care in social networks and how to look past the hype to concrete elements such as goals and metrics, just as you would with other parts of your business.
Oiling the Loudly Squeaking Wheel: How to Serve Customers in Social Media Channels Using Relevant Goals, Metrics, and Activities
1. Oiling the Loudly Squeaking Wheel: How to Serve Customers in Social Media Channels Using Relevant Goals, Metrics, and Activities Jay Badenhope, Sr. Marketing Manager Call Center Week, Las Vegas, NV – June 16, 2011 1
2. This presentation will be successful if I can help you with two things: Why your organization should allocate resources to customer care on social networks How to start matching metrics and activities to your social media goals
9. If you prioritize service channels by their reach, social networks should have your attention. 7 A marketer’s goal(grossly simplified)
10. How much you prioritize social networks depends on your progress in the Social Engagement Journey. Stage 4 Social engagement drives real business results, with systems and tools fully optimized to support confident and competent employees and to more fully harness online relationships. Impactful Stage 3 Stage 2 Operational Stage 1 Traditional, command and control business operations using one-way communication to drive business outcomes. Experimental Social engagement becomes more embedded in business operations. Internal training, channel alignment and campaign integration deliver tangible results. Traditional Dabbling in social engagement occurs but is disconnected to business operations. Fractured tools, silo’d efforts and disparate measures reign. Source: Ant’s Eye View, March 2011
30. Here are some early stage steps that would help a customer care team in social networks. Build awareness, set principles, and engage Recruit a posse and share what you learn Start small, test, and show progress
31. Consider these goals and corresponding metrics. What’s the most meaningful metric in your organization?
32. Thank you! Jay Badenhope @Intuit http://blog.intuit.com @jay_badenhope 13
Hinweis der Redaktion
You can now assume all of your worst and some of your best customer interactionsare public.
Ultimately you want to get to level 5. At that point you are…
First steps – often a volunteer effort of enlightened individuals:Build awareness – Listen to social talk and make it easier for your co-workers to listen, tooRecruit a posse – Find socially savvy co-workers and get them to help; they should appreciate the opportunity for professional growth, and you’ll appreciate the labor; find safe places to share ideasShow progress – We do social because it helps the business, set goals and share results; probably won’t be meaningful to match your goals against other teams in the early stages; challenge misplaced assumptions, such as successful social media marketing should be free and easy; it should be OK to make learning an initial goal