The State of Social Customer Service

Social customer service is no longer an innovative concept; for most, particularly the big names, it is now an integral part of customer service operations. The question being asked is no longer ‘Does your business handle customer complaints via social media?’ – it is “How well are you performing? What is your typical response rate?’

Earlier this week, SimplyMeasured published an intriguing blog post, which analysed the performance of dedicated customer support handles of the Interbrand Top 100 Brands.

Less than a quarter of Interbrand Top 100 have dedicated customer service profiles on Twitter. I wonder why this figure isn’t any greater, when there are a number of clear-cut benefits to having a unique customer services handle:

  • By separating out customer services from marketing, you avoid promoting to consumers who may have had enough of your brand already
  • Measurement can be more accurate and detailed if customer service and marketing activity aren’t muddled together
  • Response rates may be improved if less sifting through posts is required

SimplyMeasured’s blog shows that @NikeSupport is a shining example of how social customer service should be done. With an average response time of 2.8 hours vs the Interbrand average of 5.4 hours, Nike is working hard to impress its customers.

Those brands that make a firm commitment to social customer service in the next year or so, are sure to feel the rewards later down the line. Whether dedicated customer support profiles will be the norm in 2 years time, we will have to wait and see.

To read SimplyMeasured’s full blog, click here.

Latest Posts

Lurkers are your biggest audience and they’re deciding in silence. They watch in feeds, sanity-check you in comments, communities and reviews, then repeat whatever proof is easiest to quote internally. That’s why social feels harder, it’s no longer a click machine, it’s an answer surface. Ofcom shows AI summaries are now common in search results, and YouTube remains the UK’s biggest social utility by reach and time spent. If your story is inconsistent, your evidence is scattered, or your customer proof is buried, lurkers can’t do the job of trusting you for you.
Read More
Pinterest has rolled out a brand-new Media Planner inside its advertising tools, and it’s designed to make planning and managing Pin campaigns a whole lot simpler. In short? It gives you a clearer view of what you’re running, who you’re targeting, and what results you can expect…
Read More
Yep – it’s a 101 for finding out if your B2B social campaigns and content are delivering. Think you know it all? Think again. The sands of marketing are shifting…again. Aligning metrics and business objectives. Most B2B marketers can tell you the engagement rate. And they certainly know the level…
Read More