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New Study Shows Companies Don’t Hear Complaints First

Posted On This Date:  December 16, 2009 by Alexis

The evidence for companies to establish a social media monitoring program keeps building up. The most recent is the latest study from England’s Institute of Customer Service, which shows that dissatisfied customers are turning to social networks to complain about companies – before complaining to the companies themselves.

Think about that for a moment. Customers aren’t even giving companies a chance to fix poor service before telling their Facebook friends, Twitter followers and blog readers about how their expectations weren’t met. The study even says that only a small minority of dissatisfied customers bother going to the offending organization at all.

Without a social media monitoring program in place, how is a company to know this situation even exists? Odds are, they won’t. And that presents a serious problem.

The study did have a bright side, though: Individuals who are vocal about their criticisms are also likely to share positive experiences. That means companies who are keeping an eye on their online presence have the opportunity to turn complainers into happy customers – right in front of their networks’ eyes.

Check out PR Cog’s response to his experience with the lack of one company’s social media monitoring, over on Sarah Evans’ blog.

So, what are you waiting for? If you have questions about monitoring programs, where to start, online tools, etc. – ask away in the comments!

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2 Responses to “New Study Shows Companies Don’t Hear Complaints First”

  1. Michael Fraietta Says:

    Hello Alexis,

    That is an interesting study, one that I am not surprised by as I see a complaints daily on Facebook or Twitter. The first thing these companies need to do is acknowledge that they hear your complaint and forward it over to whatever department can help them. When seeing a positive remark, thank them. It goes a long way just to show that you are listening.

    Michael Fraietta

  2. Alexis Says:

    Hi Michael,

    Like you, I see complaints on Twitter and Facebook all the time, so I was glad to see a study that backed this trend up. And you’re right, even just a “We hear you, we’re sorry. We’re trying to make it right for you” or “we’re glad you had a good experience!” goes a *long* way towards creating positive brand ambassadors.

    Thanks for stopping by!

    –Alexis