The world is changing, and with it, various spheres of our
life are developing. Technical support services are no exception. In the age of
social networking, helping clients and answering their questions directly on
Facebook or via other means of Social Media Support (SMS) is the order of the
day. My name is Maria, a former technical support engineer and a present-day
senior engineer for Social Media Support at Parallels and I would like to share
some facts about Social Media Support today.
Despite the obvious similarities between conventional
support and SMS, it is important to remember that SMS has its own
characteristics, and you should keep the following differences between
conventional support and SMS in mind when creating your support dream team.
Style of Communication
The first and perhaps main difference between conventional
support and SMS is the language. Regardless of whether you talk to your
customers in Russian or in English, your style will change. When it comes to
SMS, formal language is replaced by an informal manner of speaking.
Habitual phrases and templates used in correspondence with
users are transformed into short phrases such as “Please check this out,” “Give
it a shot,” and “Thanks for sharing,” and after a while, those phrases become
even more compact, such as “plz,” “thx,” “ICYMI” (in case you missed it), or
“w/” instead of the usual “with.”
Of course, abbreviations should be used only when they are
really needed. An example would be when you need to keep your tweet under 140
characters. Unlike Twitter, forums and Facebook let us write full words, but
the style of communication is noticeably different. Thus, “Hey” or “Hi there”
is often used instead of the usual “Hello. Thank you for contacting Customer
Support.” You can also add “I mean …” to explain yourself in a post, or ask a
user for something by saying “We’d need more details on this” to get some
additional information about the issue at hand. Asking a customer if their
issue has been successfully resolved is also much easier in a forum: engineers
can ask users “Does it work OK now?”, for example.
This informal style is dictated by the users themselves, and
there is no getting away from it. Answering a cheerful, smiley-littered
question with “Thank you for contacting us. Please try these steps as a
potential solution and let us know how it goes. …… Also, verify these settings
and provide us with the steps to reproduce the issue if it doesn’t help” would
be not only irrelevant but also time consuming.
End-of-life License
Another thing that sets SMS apart from conventional support
is helping customers with their expired licenses or their questions about other
applications. In a conventional support ticket, you can explain that a version
is no longer supported or that an issue is related to a different application,
and then just close the ticket. (You give the customer a couple of links
regarding how to fix or update the application without wasting any time.) On
social networks, on the other hand, in addition to noting that an issue is
caused by another, incorrect application, we try to come up with a solution
that is likely to help our customer. Moreover, telling someone with an
end-of-life version in a forum that we cannot help them because something is no
longer updated, fixed, or supported would be just impolite, wrong, and/or
against our work ethic. SMS is an official channel that does a lot of informal
things in addition to official work. Therefore, when dealing with such a
question, you should try to not only describe the features of a new version,
but also do your best to help the customer find a solution.
How to Help “Mr. It’s Not Working,” or the Third Difference
Another distinction of SMS is that engineers often suggest a
number of possible solutions to customers when answering their questions. More
often than not, users do not describe symptoms in as much detail as in a ticket
because they don’t have a questionnaire to complete to support the process. On
Facebook, a forum or Twitter, people are more likely to post generalizations
such as “Everyone’s a jerk! Everything’s broken!” or just “Hello there!
Something isn’t working!”
Therefore, to find out what is happening to a customer we,
as technical support engineers on social networks, need to not only ask many
short follow-up questions, but also occasionally come up with solutions that
may be useful only under certain circumstances. This helps us to understand
what’s gone wrong, under what circumstances, and who or what is to blame.
This doesn’t mean, however, that we take shots in the dark
or merely check boxes. We think, reason, test, and try to reconstruct an issue
within the shortest time possible and think of something that will come in
handy for the customer, after which everything will ideally work just fine. By
using the right monitoring tools, you might see that the customer has
previously contacted support, and you can have a solution ready (maybe one you
have used before) when you hear “it’s not working again” one more time.
Timing
With any support, an engineer must answer a user within a
certain time frame, call in a timely manner to start a remote session or just a
good old telephone conversation, and resolve the issue at hand. What sets SMS
apart is that the timeframe is much more condensed. As a general rule, a
message should be replied to within 30 to 40 minutes.
Of course, the time to reply depends not only on what must
be delivered, but also on the complexity of an issue, the competence of the
engineers, whether the user has provided a detailed description of the issue,
and many other factors. On average, a Facebook reply takes 24 hours, and a
Twitter response takes about 11 hours. However there is also other evidence to
suggest that a customer generally gets a reply on Twitter within 20 minutes and
on Facebook within 30 to 40 minutes.
Customer expectations are also varied: some customers think
they should get a Twitter reply within five minutes after their tweet; other
customers say that a reply within an hour or two is acceptable. Perhaps it’s
all about the complexity and urgency of an issue, and perhaps it hinges on how
busy the customer is. Various options are possible, but timing will always be
timing, and no two support options are alike.
In any case, you should not forget that in both conventional
and social media support, resolving an issue with just one reply is valued very
highly.
Parallels Support
The Fifth Distinction Is Complexity
Some people believe that only beginners ask support
questions via social networks and that most of the questions are therefore
simple. But now that there is a tendency for active development of social
media, not only has the number of questions increased, they have also become
more complex. Of course, a lot depends on the company’s product, and this is
just one piece of the puzzle.
In practice, I have personally witnessed quite a few
questions from experienced system administrators.
(By the way, it is much simpler to communicate with system
administrators through social networks, regardless of the complexity of their
questions or product issues. This is because system administrators generally
try to describe an issue in as much detail as possible and provide any
information they can, including error codes and step-by-step instructions to
provide support. As they say, birds of a feather flock together.)
In Conclusion
The things that distinguish conventional support from the
newer social media support are neither good nor bad; each distinction can be
viewed positively for any kind of technical support. Users simply choose the
option that works best for them: either completing a support ticket or writing
about a non-working program on Facebook or Twitter. Perhaps as SM support
continues to develop and more tools emerge for engineers, SM support will come
to the fore and the number of tickets issued will decrease. We will cross that
bridge when we come to it.