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Great News!
My team I were honored by receiving Best Buy's Chairman Innovation Award, Honorable Mention. This is Best Buy highest accolade and I am pleased and delighted to have received it. I would like to thank my team for helping make this possible. Through their tireless efforts, we have been able to expand the Best Buy brand in the blogosphere in ways unlike any other company. This award gives our team and the entire Consumer Relations department great exposure within the company, showcasing the valuable work we do every day to support our customers.
Our Journey
When I started two years ago combing the Internet on behalf of Best Buy in search of customers crying out for help, I did so not as an alternative to our other contact channels, but rather as a supplement. My initial strategy was to locate situations that involved either a customer service issue or a technical issue and included the customer's contact information. I would then contact the customer privately, resolve their situation and hope they would update their online posting. While I was able to resolve several customer issues, customers did not update their initial online posting. Therefore, the online public never knew the ending to the story.
So I shifted my strategy shifted to not only help Best Buy customers, but also show the online public that Best Buy is a concerned and connected retailer who wants to have a relationship with our customers. I began by publicly and transparently responding to customers on behalf of the company. I reached out and offered to investigate the situation they posted online. This quickly resulted in both an online and offline dialogue with customers. When issues were resolved, customers updated their followers with the resolution we had worked together to achieve.
I expanded my efforts to helping customers on Twitter in April 2008, and we launched this Community Forum in September 2008. I now have a dedicated team who helps resolve customer service issues and technical support questions for our customers publicly on our Community Forum and Twitter as well as customers' personal blogs. Our goal is to support customers using the medium they are most comfortable using to communicate with us - although, I remember some time ago, a customer mailed their issue to our corporate office on a 2'x4' poster. We did our best to resolve this customer's issue; however, we did not mail back our response in the same manner!
Growth of Social Media
As more companies start using social media to support customers, I have seen some concerns regarding the level of support customers receive using this online channel to broadcast an issue versus a traditional contact such as phone, email or letter. It is not necessarily a difference in the level of tools or authority a traditional contact agent has; rather it is the difference in the number of voices that are invited to the conversation.
A traditional contact is a closed, two-way communication. Forums, blogs, Twitter, etc. open the conversation to a larger audience allowing anyone to participate. No single employee for a company has all the answers. By opening up the dialogue to both employees and the online public, customers gain access to both a company's expertise and the online public's knowledge. Our Community Forum is an excellent example of the mixture of Best Buy BlueShirt and Geek Squad Agent skills blending with the online public's knowledge. The Community Forum is a platform that facilitates conversations between employees and customers. It is a highly engaged community with the majority of the conversation generated by the community members.
TwelpForce, Best Buy's newest social media engagement, continues to facilitate the opening of access to the knowledge of our Best Buy BlueShirts and Geek Squad Agents. Technology is by nature complex. It is implausible to assume every time one of our customers has a technology question, they will drive to one of our stores. Twitter and our Community Forum allow Best Buy to be with customers on their technology journey as a trusted adviser, there to help support making their technology dreams materialize as the need arises. Social media tools enable a more connected relationship with companies and customers.
The Future
Many customers are still turning to traditional means to contact companies. I would postulate that none of the mainstream, commercially used social media tools convey as much as a telephone conversation or store visit. Someday in the future, video conferencing may eclipse the telephone conversations. My team and I will now strive to be pioneers in the use of video support for customers. We will do so with the same careful, measured diligence that has made us successful in the blogosphere.
The dawn of a new era in customer service is looming. The future comprises advanced technology that allows for the rapid and immediate connection of customers with both a company's employees, its customers and the online public. It is a bold step for a company to grasp this concept: to grow we must acknowledge we are a facilitator and an aggregator, not a beacon or panacea. While there are solutions Best Buy can provide, it is the facilitation of conversation from a multitude of sources and its aggregation into easily accessible locations that will continue to ensure that Best Buy is a leader in the field of consumer electronics and social media.
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A few weeks ago I had the pleasure of speaking at the Community 2.0 conference. The event brought together a diverse group of individuals who work with social media. I gave a broad presentation that covered many of Best Buy’s social media engagements – from this Community Forum to Twitter to Ratings and Reviews – I did my best to highlight the wide range of the great and exciting work that Best Buy does with social media. If you would like to view the presentation I gave I you can click here to view the deck.
Yesterday, there was another great overview of Best Buy’s social engagements posted on the website “We Are Social.” If you are interested, you can click here to read it.
As Best Buy’s community manager I have been on this journey for the past fifteen months. My team and I live in the blogosphere every day. We do our best to showcase Best Buy as a concerned and connected retailer. We are accessible and transparent via our Forum, multiple Twitters and other locations. Furthermore, we put insights we gather from social media into action. This has been an exciting journey and I hope to continue to expand the horizon of social media at Best Buy.
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Originally posted: Saturday, March 29, 2008
Human Innovation: The Epiphenomenon of Multilayer Computer Communication
In my spare time I am working on my doctorate. I have been doing this for a long time. It is a very slow journey. Over the past decade I have witnessed how the education industry has changed. I am sure we all remember the days of going to school with pen and paper in hand ready to regurgitate whatever the all knowing teacher told us. However, that is not the world we live in anymore.
Education occurs in a multifaceted manner in a multitude of ways. While teachers are still tomes of knowledge, they are no longer the only standard bearer of it. The interactivity of the web has created the ability for people to collaborate together on a scale never seen before in human history. Technology has ushered in an evolution of knowledge transmission. Knowledge and information are no longer only imparted in a uni-directional manner, one of static dogmatism. Rather knowledge creation is a by product of the interaction of individuals who collaborate online together.
Interesting…the new manner of human relationships is an unexpected epiphenomenon of bits and bytes flying back and forth on the super-highway of human ingenuity.
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