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News & Notes

Sarah Worsham / Mar 5, 2009

Morning Edition – Mar 5, 2009

Posting was a bit light yesterday – we were enjoying Aaron’s birthday.  Back to the grind today….

  • Why We Need Fat Mobile Pipes (GigaOM)
  • 5 Plugins to Keep WordPress Secure (DailyBlogTips)
  • Facebook in 2010: no longer a walled garden (O’Reilly Radar)
  • Social Media as a Softening Agent (Chris Brogan)

We post links to stories about how to use the web effectively throughout the day on Twitter or Delicious.  Also, if you have a post or link you think is worth sharing, please let us know!

Sarah Worsham / Mar 4, 2009

Morning Edition – Mar 4, 2009

Happy Birthday, Aaron!  (He’s old today…)  On another note, guess I did some reading yesterday:

  • Jon Stewart On Twitter: “I Have No Idea How It Works, Or Why It Is” (Silicon Alley Insider)
  • The Fastest-Growing Category in the iTunes App Store: Books (O’Reilly Radar)
  • Where In The World Is Innovation (GigaOM)
  • 6 Steps for Creating a Social Media Marketing Roadmap & Plan (Green Marketing 2.0)
  • When Choosing A Name, Think About The Story Behind It (Small Business Marketing Guide)
  • One Way to Move Content Around (Chris Brogan)
  • Paid posts should not affect search engines (Matt Cutts)
  • Flickr Adds Video and HD to Free Accounts (ReadWriteWeb)
  • Landlines Are Obsolete in Less Than a Generation (GigaOM)
  • Old and Young Use Internet Differently (Marketing Charts)
  • Online Ad Spend to Shrink for First Time since 2001 (Marketing Charts)
  • Evan Williams Predicts That “Normal People” Will Use Twitter In Five Years (TechCrunch)
  • Building Complementary Services: A Powerful Long-Term Social Media Marketing Strategy (DoshDosh)
  • Warren Buffett Explains How The Bailout Is Crushing Healthy Companies (ClusterStock)
  • IAB Issues Click Measurement Guidelines for Public Comment (AdOps Online)
  • Why Google won’t remove that page you don’t like (Matt Cutts)
  • Is the Pay-for-Performance SEO Model Still Viable? (Search Engine Guide)

We post links to stories about how to use the web effectively throughout the day on Twitter or Delicious.  Also, if you have a post or link you think is worth sharing, please let us know!

Sarah Worsham / Mar 3, 2009

Empower Your Employees to Help Your Customers

customerdantaylorYesterday Jason Falls over at Social Media Explorer wrote a post about whether brands were playing favorites on social media.  The problem is that many customers have problems, but often it seems that people who are influencers – who have a popular blog or twitter feed – will get responses from companies that normal people can’t seem to get through normal customer support channels.  I commented that right now many of the people monitoring social media at companies are higher up and actually have the power to fix problems.

Why is this exactly? Why do people have to complain on Twitter or their blog or to their influencer friends to get their problems solved?  Most of us have had an experience with a customer support system where the employee had to follow a script and wasn’t allowed to make any kind of decision. You usually have to try to get up to a manager or another department and even then there’s no guarantee that you’ll get any kind of decision.

What would happen if you allowed your customer support employees to make decisions?  You’d have to provide them with some guidelines, obviously, but what if they could actually help your customers? Many years ago I used to work a few hours a week at Bed, Bath & Beyond (ok, mostly for the discount).  They allowed their employees to give up to a 5% discount to any customer for any reason (usually having to do with a flaw in the merchandise).  Do you know how happy it makes a customer when they come up to you to show you a flaw in a product, ready for a fight, and you just give them a 5% discount without arguing?  How many of those customers were repeat customers?  I’d imagine quite a few.  I’m sure BBB made up the 5% discount with increased sales from happy customers.

All the employees at your company will influence your brand and reputation.  If you give them the power to make decisions that help customers, it will only help your company in the long run.

(photo by dan taylor @ FlickrCC)

Technorati tags: brand, brand reputation, brand strategy, business, customer service, customer-centric, customer support, marketing, strategy

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About Sazbean


Sarah Worsham (Sazbean) is a Webgrrl = Solution Architect + Product Management (Computer Engineer * Geek * Digital Strategist)^MBA. All views are her own.

Business + Technical Product Management

My sweet spot is at the intersection between technology and business. I love to manage and develop products, market them, and deep dive into technical issues when needed. Leveraging strategic and creative thinking to problem solving is when I thrive. I have developed and marketed products for a variety of industries and companies, including manufacturing, eCommerce, retail, software, publishing, media, law, accounting, medical, construction, & marketing.

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