ICMI is part of the Informa Tech Division of Informa PLC

This site is operated by a business or businesses owned by Informa PLC and all copyright resides with them. Informa PLC's registered office is 5 Howick Place, London SW1P 1WG. Registered in England and Wales. Number 8860726.

Advertisement

How to Write Excellent Social Media Responses to Customers

Wow. It's been almost a decade since companies began offering customer service via social media, and have we gotten better at it over the years! We've shed some outsized fears about being criticized by customers in public (gasp). We're using purpose-built tools to manage and measure the quality of social customer care. And we're taking social customer care seriously by hiring professionals to oversee it who have a track record in these channels. Thankfully, we've stopped handing it off to "Joe" who's "good at social" because he's under 25.

social media customer service

But there are still plenty of ways to improve the customer service we provide via Twitter, Facebook, and other channels. And top among them is to ensure that frontline agents who respond to customers in these channels have social-media-specific writing skills. While you may have staffed your social channels with experienced agents who know how to write great emails to customers or chat with them live, writing to customers in social channels is challenging and different.

Your agents need these three social-specific writing skills if they're going to deliver excellent customer care.


1.    Write in your company's brand voice. If your company's marketing is fun and friendly, but your customer service responses are scoldy or legalistic, that's not good. There shouldn't be a big disconnect between the voice your company uses with customers before they buy your product (marketing) and the voice you use when they need your help after they've purchased your product (customer service). And it's even worse to make a brand voice blunder in a social channel because it's public.

Here's a recent Twitter example from Safeway, the grocery store chain. An unhappy customer tweeted, "Yes, that's more than 30 people in line for the one open register @Safeway at 3350 Mission in San Francisco. #worstcustomerservice #Safeway," and paired his words with a photo of angry-looking people waiting in a very long line.

Here's Safeway's reply, "Thanks for making us aware of the inefficiency you encountered. The Store Director will be notified to focus on improving here." In addition to being dry and unempathetic, the writing style of this tweet is completely off. This writing doesn't "sound like Safeway" at all. And while Safeway is hardly an edgy or playful brand, the supermarket chain does use an upbeat, practical voice in its marketing, with phrases like "Grill a Best Ever Juicy Burger and have the best summer ever" or "Just for U digital coupons make it easy to save…"

Safeway's social customer service agents should be trained to write in their company's brand voice because doing so builds rapport with customers and reduces repeat contacts. If they had this brand voice writing skill, their tweet might have been written like this: "Oh no! I'm really sorry you had to wait. Thanks for letting us know. We shared your experience with the Store Directors, so they can prevent these long lines from happening in the future."

2.    Explain why you want to move the discussion to a private channel. There are lots of real-world customer service reasons to move from the public side of a social channel to the private side. You might have trained your social customer care agents to move to a direct message when:

  • the customer is furious and riling everyone else up
  • they need the customer's account or order number and don't want that info shared publicly
  • they need to ask troubleshooting questions before they can help the customer

But it's not enough to tell the customer, "Let's move this to a DM." The agent needs to explain or imply why they want to make the discussion private.

The USAA agent did this well in a recent exchange with an unhappy customer. The customer tweeted, "1st time in almost 30 years @USAA disappoints over $200. Beware of #USAAcreditcards! #USAA #losingacustomer." For lots of reasons, USAA would want to move this discussion over to DM. Their social customer care agent crafted an excellent response, which makes it likely that the customer will discuss this issue privately. USAA tweeted, "Whoa, we certainly don't want you to feel this way. Can we have a look? Please DM your phone number so that we can locate your profile. Thanks." The agent explains the reason for the DM and shows the intent to receive the customer's personal phone number privately.

In contrast, here's an example of a @ComcastCares agent who needs more training on what to write when you want the customer to move the discussion to a private channel. The customer tweeted, "Are there any trials for Showtime? We cancelled Starz due to lack of interest. Just wondering if we can have a trial for Showtime" and the @ComcastCares agent replied, "We are happy to assist you. Can you please send us a DM? -BB." That's just not good enough. Why does the customer need send a DM? Is there a trial for Showtime or not? Either answer the question publicly or explain why you want to make the conversation private.

Join Leslie this November at ICMI Contact Center Demo. She'll lead a session that will help you foster a more effective relationship with your marketing department. 

3.    Use emojis to sustain the feelings, not carry the facts, of your response. Yes, we can and should use emojis in our social customer care responses. And yes, using emojis effectively is, in fact, a writing skill. Social customer care agents need to know to use concrete words for their responses to customers and use the more abstract or suggestive emojis to decorate or embellish their responses. It's not good customer service to use emojis to express the core of an answer to a customer.

Here's an example of what not to do. An anxious customer sent this tweet to her mobile service provider, "Help! I lost my phone! Can you track it and help me find it? ?? I am dying without my phone."

And here's the response she received:

"Yikes! ???????? can help with locating your??. DM us your account info and your email address. We are here to help! Thanks, Barb ??"

That tweet looks strange and is difficult to read. The customer, who is already distressed about the loss of her phone, may not be able to decipher it. The emojis get in the way.

Here's Hawaiian Airlines' much better use of emojis in their response to a tweet from a customer who's thanking them for great service. The customer wrote, "@HawaiianAir a big Mahalo for taking such great care of our fur babies when @united stranded them on Oahu... Our Boxers made it safe and sound to JFK! Plus your cargo crew in Honolulu was absolutely amazing! ?? #ohanalove."

And here's Hawaiian Airlines' response, "Aloha Haley, we're so glad that we could assist you with this and that your pups are safe and sound! Take care! Smile emoji shaka "

Of course, it's easy to respond to happy tweets from happy customers. But Hawaiian has still demonstrated the best way to use emojis. The blushing emoji adds to the "aw shucks" feeling of the response, and the shaka sign is familiar, positive, and on-brand. And Hawaiian's tweet works just as well without the emojis as it does with them.

It's great that the years have passed and we've all calmed down about social customer care. Most contact centers have integrated social channels into their operations and are doing a good job of serving customers in these channels. And when we recognize that social customer care requires a unique set of writing skills, we'll be able to move from providing good service to delivering exceptional, social-specific responses to our customers.