Archive for Social Media
Stream Energy claims on their website that “It’s OK to switch, really!®”
Well… I’m sorry I did. In fact, I am sorry that I have involved myself with this company at all. So dissatisfied, that I created a list on twitter for “Companies I Hate” and added Stream as the number one entry. ***Edit: Stream Energy and I have come to a resolution for my particular concern. The resolution has been added later in this blog post.
Why? Simple really – it all comes down to customer service. But first, let’s look at their website again. They claim, “With competitive rates and outstanding customer service, Stream Energy has quickly established itself as a leading power and gas utility company serving the needs of customers in Texas and Georgia.”
So they make a pretty bold claim here. Not only will you get competitive rates, but you will get outstanding customer service.
First, the rates – they are in line with the others in my area. Maybe a penny less per therm. I have yet to get my bill, so I don’t know what surcharges are hidden in there and if in fact they will be less expensive. The teaser rate is significantly less. I’ll go along with the word “competitive” in this case.
Now, lets talk about customer service. Or should I say dis-service.
I’m going to skip the whole PITA (pain in the ass) online application (which wastes a good 20 minutes [if you read everything] and requires a follow up confirmation call) and skip right to the confirmation portion. I was told I had a morning hook-up scheduled (hours between 8 AM and noon) and that I had to be on premises to pay a $25.00 connect fee. Since my alternative residence is only 15 minutes away, I asked if they could call me en-route so that I could meet them. I was told this was not possible. OK, I can live with that so I made arrangements to not have appointments that morning so that I could sit in a house with no running water and no heat in order to wait for gas hook up. Please note: The confirmation date was a good week and a half out and the premises in question is already equipped with a gas meter hook up.
Did they arrive on time? If my watch was set for the Hawaiian Time Zone (UTC -10h), then yes. A service tech did not arrive until 3:42 PM. Yep, I waited almost twice as long as the window promised in a cold house, losing billable time.
Now I am hungry and have my afternoon appointments in jeopardy because the hook up has not occurred yet. I call my clients and reschedule. I call Stream to find out what the deal with my hook up is. Did I call Stream Energy? You bet I did. By the way – if you don’t know your account number, you will need to go through several menu choices to talk to a representative.
Here’s where I get mad. I am now told that my hook up is an all day appointment. I ask how long is a day – what are the working hours? I am told it shows as all day. Yes, you told me that. When does the day end? 4 PM? 5PM? 7PM? Worse, I felt as if I couldn’t ask my question because the CSR kept interrupting me before I finished asking my question. How can you help me if you don’t listen to my question? I am given the phone number for Atlanta Gas Light. Great, another number to call because Stream can’t answer my question. Inefficient and rude.
I call AGL. They send a tech over who tells me that I didn’t need to be on premises and I don’t need to pay $25.00 on the spot. Great – now Stream totally had me waiting there for no reason and I lost a complete day of billable time. A whole day of billable time to save on 2 months of service. Yeah – that’s a good deal!
***Resolution communication
So what to do? Turn to social media. They have FaceBook and Twitter plastered on their website. Unfortunately, on FaceBook – its a FAN page. At this point I am anything but a FAN. So I tweet. I decide I am going to Tweet at least once a day until I either receive a response from Stream OR get sick of bashing a company.
It took Stream Energy ONE WEEK to respond to me. The initial contact did come from a Sr. Executive (name and position withheld without release permission). I also recognize that every story has 3 sides: both parties and the truth which lies somewhere in-between. I’m also sure my view is still obscured by what I perceived to be lack of respect, rudeness, and a wasted day. AND I appreciate them reaching out. That act restores some credibility.
So after a few other e-mails, I receive a few phone calls (yes they were persistent since I did not return the calls at first) from a senior leader of their customer service team. He informed me that he had personally looked into the matter and that they would be using this situation as a learning experience for their representatives. Hopefully my experience will benefit other customers. The key points for me as a learning experience are as follows:
- Provide accurate appointment data such as time, presence required, and fees to the customer for hook-up day.
- If Stream can’t provide #1, then provide flexibility to the customer such as a courtesy call before the tech arrives. If that’s another company’s responsibility – work it out. Stream is who I buy gas from.
- Don’t make me call a third party. Stream is my contact – and should handle it.
- Ensure Stream’s customer service representatives listen to the customer’s concerns or questions. And ensure they don’t provide vague unhelpful information.
I wish that was the end of the story. Unfortunately its not. And the rest of the story becomes a great case study for what to do/not do in terms of using social media for business development.
About two hours after hanging up the phone with the Customer Service leader, the same Sr. Executive whom initiated contact sent a follow up e-mail. He kindly suggested I consider deleting my tweets and any related posts. I kindly declined.
Here are the lessons learned for utilizing Social Media as a business strategy.
- If you are create a social media business presence, be prepared to respond via social media For example:
- Visitors to your FaceBook page may not want to be a “fan” or “like” everything about your company. Provide contact information access to your company there OR allow people to post content.
- If you have a Twitter account for your company, be prepared to respond to tweets and questions in a timely fashion. If you are just squatting on the Twitter handle – disclose that.
- Establish some sort of “brand reputation” or “monitoring” strategy. This can be an expensive solution such as Radian 6 or a cheap roll your own solution with Google Alerts. It’s not hard and it will allow you to catch issues before they become serious problems.
- Treat every faux-pas as a learning opportunity. In this case, Stream did that. Unfortunately they dropped the ball when they requested it go away. Embrace your mistakes. Show the world your company cares and adapts to legitimate concerns of the customer. This will only help your brand.
I welcome any posts from Stream Energy on this matter. I also welcome any thoughts or comments regarding Stream Energy’s request to consider removing my tweets and posts.
There are many opportunities this week for some great learning opportunities. Best of all, they are all FREE! I’ll be splitting my available time between two major initiatives this week: Social Media Tools Week and LearnTrends 2009.
How to participate in either conference
These aren’t your typical conferences. They are conducted using a web conferencing tool. Not that a web conferencing tool is earthshaking new. The meat of the conference happens in the social media based communities. For Social Media Tools Week, this is in the back-chat channel occurring on Twitter and Google Wave. Feel free to use ChickenFox’s Conversation Dashboard.
For LearnTrends, this will happen in Twitter as well as the LearnTrends Ning community. Be a casual observer, or an active participant. The choice is up to you.
LearnTrends 2009
LearnTrends is an online conference created by Jay Cross and his peers. This year will focus on Convergence in the Workplace. From my experience, its a great place to hear new ideas from the pioneers of informal and social learning. The conference sessions this year will run Tuesday Nov 17 through Thursday Nov 19. All you need to do is register to attend.
All presenters are asked to save half their time for questions and discussion with you. LearnTrends is hosted on the Elluminate platform. Show up a few minutes early to download Elluminate’s Java start file. All sound will be Voice Over IP. No telephone links. If you want to speak, you need to have a headset to avoid audio feedback. Link to online event.
The Twitter hashtag is #learntrends. Tweet away but please use Elluminate’s chat function for questions for presenters.
Social Media Tools Week 2009
A similar type of venue to LearnTrends. Come hear some thought leaders in the social media space in a packed schedule. Contribute your thoughts in the back-chat. This conference runs all week. Again, all you need to do is register. Even though it has already started, its not too late!
Discuss the conference on several platforms:
Google Wave search the public timeline (with:public SMTW)
Twitter hashtag #SMTW
It’s been a busy few weeks with some looming project deadlines, so I received a nice pick me up on Tuesday when Google informed me that I was receiving my Google Wave invitation. Now two days later, a whole bunch of my Wave friends and I are wondering what next?
My Irish friends are keen on discussing the upcoming Ireland-France play off match. Well, that and posting where they are all going for a pint via the map and voting gadgets while my day is just getting started.
My learning and development peers and I have been discussing how we believe Wave will be a revolutionary tool for distance learning because of its ability to provide a rich collaborative environment for breakout sessions. So then I started wondering – how would this work on my mobile phone?
I haven’t had the opportunity to test it on my old Windows Mobile or Android phones yet, but I did fire it up on the iPhone. It gives a warning screen that it’s “not a supported browser”, but you can bypass that and it’ll run. It’s missing some of the features of the normal version of Wave, but works well.
Then I discovered App-It. App-It is a web page at www.AppIt.us. It’s quite simple in that it is a list of links to Google apps, like Gmail, Calendar, Talk, Latitude, voice, etc. Just make Wave shortcut, by clicking the (+) button in your browser and “Add to Home Screen”. This creates an icon on the desktop for convenient use. Now I’m in Google heaven as I use these apps on daily basis for my business.
Are you a Wave user? if so, what are your thoughts? How have you used it so far?
Friday September 25, 2009 will mark an inflection point for social media events in Atlanta. The question is, in what direction are we trending. Atlanta has several Social Media events already. They range from small meetups to multi-day unconferences such as SoCon. New Media Atlanta is the new kid on the block and brings with it lofty aspirations and polished marketing.
First, lets look at how the event was marketed. This is important because there were a lot of people in attendance. Many of them paid what they considered to be a reasonable sum of money to attend.
The New Media Atlanta conference is a high level, business dialog about how social media is changing marketing and messaging – and in fact, changing the nature of all communications. We’ll talk about strategies to leverage its power to build your company, product, brand, service, etc.
Have you been curious about what social media can mean for your own business?
Are you interested in learning from a group of experts who have the experience to guide you along the way long-term?
Does a chance to meet some real-world social media leaders, authors and speakers appeal to you?
This conference is meant for you and other business owners who are engaging in social media but haven’t quite made the leap to exponential success.
Maybe those people (myself included) should have honed in on the words “high level” because this is what the morning was… High Level. Unfortunately, the event hosts exacerbated the problem by starting late and kicking the event off with a good hour of “thank-our sponsors.” Even though, the marketing was beautiful, the event well coordinated, and the facilities fabulous – serious credibility had been lost before the kickoff keynote speaker took the stage. And it had already seeped into the conference backchannel conversations (on twitter and backnoise).
To make things worse, the opening keynote tried to adapt his presentation because of the sentiment trending in the backchannel. He stated “the conference sucked so far.” This was followed by two more presentations that were either retread presentations from another event or a glorified “look at me” show. The backchannel toxicity escalates further. Thank goodness it’s lunch time.
Lunch provided a welcome respite, needed food and drink (since both were banned from the auditorium), and the chance to speak with the closing keynote speaker – Chris Brogan. Chris was kind enough to chat with everyone and sign copies of his book “Trust Agents.“ Unfortunately, it was not good enough to keep me at the conference – especially since it was being live streamed. So I, and a whole bunch of other people, left the conference.
I’m not sorry. I got to avoid the Friday afternoon Atlanta traffic. I still got to watch the conference, although I was not there in person. And I was still able to follow the backchannel – which was still toxic. Content wise, the afternoon picked up. The panel was good, and Chris Brogan did not disappoint. Here’s why – he addressed the backchannel. He made it part of his presentation, or a better term would be a conversation. I am sorry that I did not go to the after party. and skipping the Atlanta traffic was worth it.
I know many people were disappointed with the conference. It’s a real shame because if the content issues are addressed, this could be a great event – especially since the people organizing it know how to market it and make it look good. I don’t want to say the “Lipstick on a pig” line, but I do live in the South. Do I feel like I got my money’s worth? The answer would be “no.” Admittedly, I left early. However I blocked a day off from clients and I paid for the event – so there were some significant investments made. Leaving allowed me to recoup about 40% of that. Would I go again next year? The answer is maybe. It is contingent upon the content. I will also be asking a lot more questions about the content before agreeing to go.
So in a nutshell, here are the salient points about the conference:
- Don’t start late with a bunch of advertising
- consider putting your keynote speaker first – especially if you have a high powered panel later.
- If it is going to be “high level” content, don’t bill it as a business solution solver.
- If you are going to bill it as business oriented, have more business representation present (from multiple industries)
- Encourage your presenters to bring “fresh material”, I don’t want to see last years presentation – again.
- Pay attention to the backchannel and adjust as needed
- Kudos for putting the event together and executing on it. Event planning and execution is hard work.
- Bowling shirts are COOL.
Over the next few days, I’ll be post ing a few more blog posts related to the backchannel conversations. This topic has many facets for exploration, and the one I want to discuss is its role in learning and development.
Were you at New Media Atlanta? What were your thoughts? What’s your feedback? What were your snarky backchannel comments?
