Social Media For Good; What We Can Do as Kenyans

On a chilly Thursday morning I woke up to something interesting on Twitter; a discussion fronted by @PaulaKahumbu CEO of Wildlife Direct. She posed a rather intriguing question and got me tweeting for the next one hour! Social media has changed and continues to shape the way we exchange of information, share content and add to it as well as pass it on and discuss ideas.

In the past we have seen #KOT (Kenyans on Twitter) come together for various good reasons, we had #CarpoolKE, #KOTagainstMpbonus, #PeremendeMovement, #KenyansForKenya, #KOT4Conje among other great initiatives meant for the good of the society.

We’ve also popular TT’s such as #TurkanaOil, #SomeoneTellCNN, #BudgetyaMasuffer, #MiddleClassProblemsKE and customer service oriented #tags; the popular #TwitterBigStick and #TwitterThumbsup. As some of us do well (right, good & social stuff) on social networks some tribalists have been publishing hate messages something DR. Bitange Ndemo has been talking about weekly since late last year in the Wednesday Media Monitoring briefings at the Infocomm Ministry.

Late last year we had #SGSNairobi by UNDP which brought together tech-preneurs & social innovators whose ideas, initiatives and campaign have had massive success and huge positive social impact and we should have more of such events often. (Methinks)

Recently (yesterday) we had #SomeoneTellBotswana, #SomeoneTellCNN & #SomeTellKenya which shows a growing sense of pride in our nation and demonstrates our patriotism. I am more than happy to see the number of hate pages and Twitter handles reduce in Kenya, we managed to pull through the election peacefully with minimal cases of hate tweets and propaganda. What this tells me is Kenyans are now taking social media seriously and it’s time we scaled that up to unlock the full potential on social media.

How about we have weekly sessions on Twitter on to discuss various issues/topics?
Karani Mutonga, CBI 360 and I started #BusinessWedKE; a 1 hour long discussion to share insights, opinions and information related to Biashara and various things affecting the industry sometime late last year but the hashtag didn’t gain traction. We used to invite online panelists to tweet and respond to some questions or give feedback on our topic of the week.
Due to the feedback on Dr. Paula Kahumbu’s #ThinkTank and #PowerHour we could dedicate an hour per week to discuss various topics/issues affecting us. Could be tech, politics, health, governance, corruption, education etc.
For purposes of having something relevant, the tech community can say come use #TechThinkTank, education players can use #EducationThinkTank na watu wa Biashara can have #BizThinkTank in our weekly #PowerHourKE. Or should they be uniform? Remain or use #KEThinkTank? You tell me!

So say this kicks off next week we can maybe start with education, the other week we go to governance or democracy like that et;al. I would also like to volunteer to coordinate the think tank debates/ chats, to come up with topics in partnership with players in different industries and raise them for discussion every Thursday 9 am to 10:00 am.

Well if you have any contribution to this post please follow me @KenyanMarketer & share your response with me and other #KOT.

10 Tips For Brands Using Social Media For Customer Service.

What social media managers need to know.

Social networking has become integral to the lives of many and to brands social media is just another way to talk to, and engage with their customers. To zoom in Kenya users of social media represent the most influential and economically able section of the population. This number continues to grow especially as access to the Internet’s tool of choice, the mobile phone, makes astronomical inroads even in areas considered remote. Ninety five percent of the Generation Y (which form the bulk of consumers)  are members of a social network being their preferred media interaction. This completely changes the when, where and how brands need to connect and interact with this generation. Customer service is just one area where brands are really starting to take advantage of the online channel, given the large array of social tools now available to help them deliver great service. So here are a few tips you could apply in your business if you use social media for customer service

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  1. 1.      Don’t promise what you can’t deliver

This happens mostly when a brand has hired an agency/ person to external to the organization to manage their social media presence. Should you outsource the managing of your presence please ensure the people handling the brand understand your business well. Send them updates in real time to ensure they understand exactly what you’re up to. During campaigns, launches and events ensure your digital team is in sync with what the experiential, PR and media agencies handling your brand are doing. Ensure your business too has the technical capability to deliver what it promises.

  1. 2.      Give Timelines

On Twitter I get replies that sound automated such as “we apologize for the inconvenience and someone is going to get in touch with you shortly” Duh! I want the problem fixed now! Shortly could mean hours, days or weeks to some companies!  When responding to complaints kindly give timelines, avoid words like “soonest” ASAP or shortly; give specific timelines. Say in an hour, by 4 pm, by close of business today etc. Should it be a problem that requires dispatching a team of technicians or engineers; do advice the customer accordingly.

  1. 3.      Integrate social media across the whole business

Social media should be viewed more broadly across a business and form part of an organization’s structure. Based on the different kinds of inquiries and complaints that you get from the varied users/publics on social media, it’s important to ensure that every department has someone to respond to certain issues that may require specialized attention. The best people to respond to a sales question on twitter are members of the sales team; likewise a customer service question on a help forum should be handled by someone from the customer services team.

  1. 4.      Read & Respond

There’s a certain tendency to ignore certain inquiries, could be overlooked erroneously or otherwise. This sends a signal out there that the brand is unfriendly, busy to handle my inquiry or unsocial and uncaring. Every page has that group/people who just hate the brand, if your feel they are becoming a nuisance you may block them however at the beginning seek to win over their loyalty by handling their issues promptly. Some could be paid, may be attention seekers or are just serial complainers.  

  1. 5.      Make use of the responses

To avoid repeat questions in the future, frequent reviews of the types of questions received enables a brand to identify opportunities to develop its content; i.e. if lots of customers keep asking a specific question, it’s likely the brand isn’t sufficiently explaining, or promoting the answer to that question across its communications channels. Should such issues arise, you may consider using print and TV media for PR to clear out the issue, add more information on your site or air a commercial specifically to communicate/respond to certain issues that show most prevalence.

  1. 6.      Provide useful links with information on your website

Once in a while it’s good to share links on your site that have information that could help solve the customer inquiry or complaints. This helps drive customers to the most up-to-date source of information (your website). Tracking these links will help marketers track just how many people are using the content to help answer their own questions.

  1. 7.      Be prepared for a greater volume of questions

People asking on any platform (twitter especially) expect an almost instant response. Brands need to be sure they can deal with (and answer) any increase in the volume of questions. For a mobile operator you need a robust team on social to handle the volume of complaints that come in. Should you anticipate an outage/breakdown in your service, notify your customers/followers and give timelines when you expect the service to be up again. If you decide to use your social media presence to handle customer service kindly ensure it is well staffed by people who understand your product or service.

  1. 8.      Have a strategy to deal with complaints and issues

Think about how the brand will deal with complaints in an open forum. There needs to be a balance between what a brand does publicly to be seen to be dealing with a customer’s complaint, and taking the complaint offline to deal with it in full. A tool like ChittyChat on Twitter gives you a chance to engage in a conversation in “private,” allowing you to communicate directly with them instead of using “mentions”. Rather than engaging the angry customer publicly you may DM or inbox them instead. You may also ask for their number so that you take the discussion completely offline. You may also engage the services of your brand loyal/happy customers to help you handle the ‘heat’ and hate by responding behind the scenes and managing your brand reputation.

  1. 9.      Be consistent

The way a brand responds to customers will be noticed so offer consistent help to similar problems. It is important to train your customer care staff on handling customer complaints appropriately. Being consistent helps other users learn and help the brand build trust with its customers.

10. Be careful of setting a precedent

When dealing with a complaint, does your brand really want to offer a refund on a product in full view of thousands of people on facebook or on Twitter? Do you have a money back programme for customers that aren’t satisfied with the service they received or product they bought? The response you give to complaints in the public domain may set a precedent. Kindly ensure that you don’t create a loophole that people may take advantage. Providing official answers will help resolve more customer queries and reduce the number of ‘me too’ kind of questions.