More on hearing in social media

Posted on August 12th, 2010 by tim bursch. Filed under business, listen, marketing, social media.


dogear_social_hearing

There are a lot of companies and organizations listening online. Everyone seems to have tools pointed at the web, mining data on their brand and customers. All of this adds up to a lot of information and some good business results. Look at Dell or Starbucks.

So, in all of this listening are customers really being heard?

Listening has the intent of gathering information, connecting, and paying attention.
Hearing is about comprehension, understanding, and perception.

Semantics? Maybe. My point is there are two sides of this online equation. If companies listen. Hopefully customers are heard.

Okay, so not every customer will be heard. But what should a business do?
Here are a few ideas:

  • Simply ask. Ask customers publicly or privately if they felt heard.
  • Notice customer transformations. Do you see negatives turned to positives in interactions?
  • Look for advocacy. If you move beyond paying attention and customers are heard, they become advocates. Are customers acting as your ambassadors, answering questions before you respond, and defending your organization?

 

Hearing Example:
I wrote this post, mildly griping about AT&T and their customer data. A few days later, someone from AT&T follows me on Twitter. We have an interaction and I get a response.

image

I feel heard. Closed loop.

How are you tracking Social Hearing?

Photo credit: BL4d3RuNr



  • Tim - I wasn't quite sure we were on the same page after we traded comments on your August 3rd post. After today I'm quite certain we are.

    A lot of companies attempt to "listen" but end up with elementary reporting like how many "mentions" they received or what the automated sentiment analysis (boooo) told them.

    Especially for companies that are subject to tons of chatter, they need a more sophisticated approach to pro-actively "hear" customers. I alluded to some fancy Twitter searches in my comment that I like to use to hone in on these few insightful tweets amongst a sea of generic mentions. As promised I blogged about them this week with some advanced Twitter search tips to cut through the noise: http://bit.ly/cv2BI1. I'd be very interested to hear your thoughts as it relates to this post and the one from August 3rd.
  • Hey Josh,
    Thanks for sticking with me here and adding to the conversation. I will take a look at your post and comment. I think the tools will continue to get better and help with the issue of hearing.
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