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Online communities foster customer loyalty by doing what traditional contact Print Version Popular Articles
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Call Centers Beware
By Leonard Klie
For the rest of the June 2011 issue of CRM magazine please click here Page 1 New EU Regs to Affect
Email and Online
Not long ago, Specialized Bicycle Components, a Marketing
Morgan Hill, Calif.âbased designer and maker of
Million Dollar Customer
bicycles and related equipment and apparel, received
Loyalty Lesson
an alert from its social media monitoring software that
a customer had posted a complaint because his local
Marketing Industry
bike shop was going to take three weeks to fix his
Migrating to the Cloud
Tweet Specialized bike.
Donât Forget the âCâ in
Specialized stepped in, contacted the irate avid bicyclist, phoned Social CRM
the repair shop, and was able to return the bike to the rider the Â
next day. As a result, the customer pledged his loyalty to
Specialized.
âItâs a lot of fun, and it feels great when someone starts out mad
at you, and at the end of the day theyâre saying theyâre with you
for life,â says Ryan French, director of inside sales and customer
service operations at Specialized.
Not only does Specialized keep an eye on blogs and social media sites like Facebook and Twitter by using RightNow Cloud
Monitor software, but the company also created a support community and forum called the Master Link. There, customers
post questions and answers, search for information in a self-service FAQ, share stories, and vent frustrations. A full-time
customer service employee monitors and responds to issues raised there and on other sites, and two part-timers help
out. The social community handles about 15 percent of all interactions itself, and in those cases the customer service rep
monitors responses to ensure the advice offered is accurate.
For its social media efforts, the company has created brand advocates, increased self-service and call deflection rates,
reduced support costs, and expanded Web traffic to featured product pages by 30 percent.
âEvery time someoneâs been heated enough to go on a blog site or social media and weâve intervened, weâve saved that
relationship,â French boasts. âW eâre not making a huge impact with a large number of people, but the people we have
reached are very loyal now. Theyâre saying theyâll never buy another bike from anyone else.â
More companies are adopting social community platforms as a form of customer service and are garnering more tangible
results. Social CRM solutions provider Lithium Technologies, for one, says that users of the social communities it has
created generated nearly 106 million posts last year alone, estimating the value of those communities at more than $466
million.
Companies like Comcastâwell-known in social media and CRM circles for its popular @ComcastCares channel on Twitter
(see Q&A with Frank Eliason)âand others like Dell, Bank of America, Best Buy, JetBlue, and Zappos have some of the
more recognizable deployments of social CRM products. However, there have been a handful of others during the past
year or two.
Linksys is a Cisco Systems division that offers consumer and small-office Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) and
networking solutions. Through its online customer support community, powered by Lithium software, the company
attracts more than 4 million user sessions and more than 3,000 new threads each month. Its forum is available in English,
German, Spanish, French, Italian, and Portuguese.
For Linksys, the measurable benefits overwhelmingly come in the form of call deflections. By its own estimates, direct
deflection (which occurs when a user who would ordinarily call support instead posts a question and gets a response)
happens more than 1,000 times per month; indirect deflection (when a customer gets the answers he wanted without
having to post a question) accounts for another 120,000 cases per month. In addition, Linksys was able to eliminate
email support within a year of launching the community.
The support costs to Linksys are minimal: a staff of full-time moderators who manage the community, IT, and Lithium
licensing. Overall, the company is saving millions in support costs.
StrongMail, an email marketing and social media firm, also has reaped huge rewards since implementing a social media
customer service tool from Jive Software. StrongMailâs Spark online community has seen an 86 percent adoption rate by
customers, with 58 percent logging in to Spark regularly to search for answers or help others. Among the benefits to that,
the company found that 95 percent of customers who log in find answers to their questions or have their issues resolved
there, leading to a 50 percent reduction in calls to its technical support center. Sixty-nine percent of users turn to the
Spark community first before contacting support, and 90 percent have found it helpful.
âThereâs a phenomenal amount of customer engagement and participation in this community,â says Adam Mertz, senior
product marketing manager at Jive.
Cisco, another Jive client, sees 25,000 questions posted to its community site each month; millions of new cases are
avoided each year because customers find the answers they need from previous posts. That amounts to tens of millions
2. of dollars saved annually, Mertz notes.
LANDesk Software, which uses Jive for the companyâs service and support platform, has also seen savings in personnel. It
reports a 16 percent deflection from the call centerâthe equivalent of four full-time employees. Whatâs more, âthe
company is getting new brand advocates for each launch they do,â Mertz says. âIt really is helping drive the customer
experience while reducing costs for the company.â
Jive released research that shows that for many of its 3,000 clients, social CRM is delivering quantifiable results and is
becoming a mission-critical component of customer service strategies. Among the top customer engagement benefits
were:
âąÂ a 33 percent increase in customer satisfaction;
âąÂ a 42 percent increase in communications with customers;
âąÂ a 31 percent increase in customer retention;
âąÂ a 34 percent rise in brand awareness;
âąÂ a 28 percent reduction in support call volume;
âąÂ a 34 percent increase in feedback and ideas from customers; and
âąÂ a 27 percent increase in new customer sales.
The survey involved 500 people from more than 300 companies, including Cisco, Intel, Vodafone, Pegasystems, VMWare,
SAP, Hitachi, and McAfee. Other Jive clients include Avon, Starbucks, Lifetime Fitness, and LiveNation. For all of them,
âsocial media has become one more layer in their enterprise stack,â Mertz explains.
In the Network
But perhaps the most telling of all ROI stories related to social CRM comes from Giffgaff, a mobile virtual network operator
in the United Kingdom. Its customer community, which launched in late 2009, is the companyâs only customer support
channel. Giffgaff has no contact center, but its support teams are more active than ever. In 2010, more than 100,000
questions were posed in the help forum, and community members answered all of them. For most questions, the average
response was three minutes, and 95 percent of questions were answered in less than an hour.
âThatâs not something you get from even some of the best contact centers,â says Phil Soffer, vice president of product
marketing at Lithium, whose software powers the Giffgaff social channel.
âThe value generated by the community is incredible and means we can take the savings we make from not having a
traditional, high-cost infrastructure, and pass that directly to our customers in terms of great product value. Everyone
wins,â Vincent Boon, community manager at Giffgaff, says in an email.
Giffgaffâs strategy works, says Santanu Nandi, executive vice president of telecom and media at Firstsource, a global
business process outsourcer, because communities like that help companies âcreate a strong bond with customers.â
In addition, Giffgaff has a built-in rewards program for select customers who handle inquiries from other customers. âIt
keeps them active and responsive because theyâre getting rewarded for helping fellow customers,â Nandi says.
The rewards also help Giffgaff gain customers. Some use the rewardsâtypically free minutes or servicesâthemselves, but
many share them with friends and family, who become customers, too.
There is little cost involved in a rewards program because it needs to be applied to only a handful of people. âIn most
support communities, 5 percent of the people answer 80 percent of the questions,â Mertz says.
In addition to free offers and incentives, Sanjay Dholakia, founder and CEO of CrowdFactory, advocates some form of
recognition on the site for members of the online community who are particularly helpful and knowledgeable. That can be
accomplished by automatically attaching special badges or icons to those membersâ posts, he says.
Moreover, while it is important for companies to monitor and verify the information being presented in peer-to-peer
support, many customers view the data from fellow customers as more credible because itâs presented without any
corporate spin.
The challenge, though, is to give these people a favorable view of the business, Dholakia says. When that happens, the
benefits to the company are immense. âWhen someone goes into the community and asks a question and someone else
answers it, thatâs a call that didnât have to go to the contact center,â he says. âThatâs an easy benefit to spot. The biggest
benefit is when people start talking about the business and bringing other people to it.â
Building a Following
This form of customer service will become the norm, according to research firm Gartner. âAt current trajectories, within five
years we expect that community peer-to-peer support projects will supplement or replace tier-one contact center support
in more than 40 percent of the top 1,000 companies with a contact center,â says Drew Kraus, a research vice president at
Gartner.
Martin Schneider, former senior director of communications at SugarCRM, also predicts a three- to five-year window before
social media is fully embraced by customer service. âW eâre now probably in year two,â he says. â2012 is really when
youâre going to see the big push.â
The change has already started. âAdoption has been picking up in just the past few months,â Schneider adds. âW eâre
seeing a very rapid uptick.â
But before community platforms can become a mainstay of customer service, companies must break down the silos that
separate sales, marketing, and customer service, realign staff and business processes, update their software, and build
communities and nurture them. Also important is integrating customersâ social networking information with existing CRM
data.
According to SugarCRMâs 2010 Social CRM Survey, only 26 percent of respondents currently integrate customer social
networking and CRM data. But 72 percent of respondents plan to do so this year.
Half of the respondents to the SugarCRM survey also said social networks have helped their businesses become more
successful during the past year.
3. In basic terms, social media is a way to gauge customer sentiment, which is important because negative feelings can
spiral out of control quickly if left unaddressed. But, with a proper customer community in place, complaints can be
handled quickly, often without a lot of staffing. âThe real power [of social media] is in putting your business in the hands
of the crowd to act on your behalf,â Dholakia says. âIf my business can empower the crowd, Iâm no longer limited in the
number of people I can have on staff.â
But itâs often not as easy as it sounds. Call deflection alone doesnât always lead to an opportunity to reduce staff, Kraus
says. âIf youâre just adding a more convenient channel for customers to interact with your company, youâre not going to
require fewer people to support it,â he explains. âIf you can get your customers to support one another, thatâs where you
get the benefits.â
Doing so can also protect a company 24/7, even when staff members who monitor and respond to posts are not on the
clock. The companyâs community brand advocates can respond when its own employees have logged off.
If the community can draw members from all around the world, thatâs even better. Toward that end, Jive has worked with
Lingotek to incorporate a translation engine into its forum sites. Using the Lingotek tool, users can type their questions
and answers in their native languages and other community members can click on the tool to have posts translated for
them.
Get Back to Me
While debate continues about whether most people who post negative comments to a social site want to be contacted
by the company, Jen Page, product marketing manager of social solutions at RightNow Technologies, says it doesnât hurt
to reach out. And she has numbers to back up that claim.
According to her firm, 58 percent of consumers expect a response when they post a complaint, and 42 percent want that
response within 24 hours. Also, 68 percent of customers who posted a complaint using social media were contacted by
the offending company. And, as a result, 34 percent deleted their negative posts, 33 percent posted positive reviews,
and 18 percent became loyal customers.
âMany of these complaints can be solved easily,â she says. âItâs a low-cost way to deal with issues while creating loyalty
among customers.â
In most cases, timing is of the essence. By most estimates, high-volume negative posts to Twitter can become viral in an
hour. âIf you can respond to it within an hour, you have just given yourself an immense savings,â says David Lowy, vice
president of product management at social media monitoring solutions provider Moxie Software.
Lowy recommends that companies use analytics and sentiment analysis tools to determine which Tweets need to be
addressed immediately. âLook at how important the person is. Does he have a lot of followers?â he says. âAlso, look at
the volume of complaints around the same issue.â
For a company such as Specialized, riders are not the only things that move fast. âThereâs often a very short period of
time before something goes viral. You have to respond lightning-fast because information travels lightning-fast on social
media,â French says.
The Web is 24/7, and employing one person eight hours a day wonât cut it, he adds. He hopes to expand his staff and the
number of sites the company monitors.
âSo far, keeping our customers happy and providing a positive experience has been huge for us and our dealers,â French
says. âIf youâre a company dedicated to customer service, youâve gotta be using social media.âÂ
News Editor Leonard Klie can be reached at lklie@infotoday.com.
To contact the editors, please email editor@destinationCRM.com
Every month, CRM magazine covers the customer relationship management industry and beyond. To subscribe, please visit
http://www.destinationCRM.com/subscribe/.
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