Argos customer service win. How it could have gone wrong…

So, I am sure over the past few days you have seen the Argos  “badman” tweets doing the rounds as examples of great social customer service. For those of you who haven’t seen the posts, here is the story…

Bugti wants to know about when new PS4 stock arrives in the Moss Side branch, it has taken too long. Added to that he was annoyed about the member of staff in branch who had a bad attitude.

Cue the response that got everyone talking by Argos. Credit to them for humanising and injecting some light-heartedness into dealing with customers. There is also the potential that, like this post, these unique responses get picked up in social media and get positive press…

BUT IT COULD HAVE GONE WRONG…

There is fine line at the front line of social customer service. Comments can made over the phone by call centre staff but there is no where to hide in social media. Equally, there is no real right or wrong way to respond which makes it incredibly difficult to judge a situation. The tweet from @argoshelpers could have equally been portrayed as sarcastic, mocking or rude and could have got the back up on an already frustrated customer…

Thankfully for Argos and the customer service team, it didn’t…

Long live humanising the approach I say, but as brands continue to push the boundaries there will be more and more of these types of stories to debate… so let’s do just that…

Tweet us: win or lose #argoshelpersfineline or drop a comment below…   

Source: Original Tweets from Twitter. Mocked post created using https://lemmetweetthatforyou.com/t/8bwjxc

Latest Posts

Social Snapshot 22.10.25 banner, blue globe background, bold white title and date. Newsletter issue on long-form social video with platform specs, paid limits, YouTube TV viewing, TikTok Creator Rewards (>1-minute), Instagram 3-minute Reels, measurement and AEO tips
Read More
this post unpacks why b2b isn’t boring and how it’s moved from nice-to-have to mission-critical. it argues for trust as a working system (clear claims, named sources, human voices), puts short, sourced answers where people and ai look (linkedin, youtube, communities), and shows why people beat logos for credibility. it backs hybrid buying journeys that give control and timely human support, and it tracks intent signals like saves, sends and branded search. if b2b is your world, join us at socialday b2b forum 2025 at bounce, shoreditch on 12 november to go deeper.
Read More
If you’re a B2B marketer, you can probably see your buyer is changing. Your meetings seem to have more and more senior-positioned folk who are younger, digitally native, and social pioneers. It’s time to adapt accordingly. They research on their phones, trust creators more than brands, and expect to feel…
Read More