Posts Tagged ‘Twitter’

How to fail at CRM: Twitter doesn’t understand what makes Twitter great

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

Of the many advantages that social networking offers to business, customer relationship management is counted as one of the top benefits.  Yet, first Facebook and now Twitter have utterly failed to capitalize on the strengths of their platforms and alienated their customer base by introducing “features” that have upset their users.

Helloooo! Bad PR lasts longer and carries farther than good PR.  This is  business 101.

Facebook and Twitter are two of the top social networks yet both failed to use their strengths - communication between people - to alienate their client base.  In the case of Facebook, they changed their format making familiar features difficult to find and making previously private information public.  To their credit, they responded quickly to customer outrage by making it easier for customers to change their format.  The next time they planned to make a change the solicited customer input with a notice at the top of the page.  (Guess what.  I didn’t take the time to respond to that notice so I don’t have any right to complain if I don’t like the changes.)

In Twitter’s case, they removed the ability to see @replies for posters you aren’t following without any input from their users.  No input causes outrage and outrage in the Twitterverse means a new hashtag: #fixreplies.

I don’t really care what Twitter’s reason for making the change was (you can read more about it at mashable.com).  What matters is they handled the change badly.  They failed to give adequate notice of the change and, more importantly, failed to solicite customer input.  They compounded their error by giving a reason (supposedly a customer benefit) that didn’t fly.

If their initial reason was correct -  they were creating a customer benefit - then soliciting customer input would have set them right or at least let them know they needed to provide an alternative mechanism for people to find interesting posters.  If their second explanation - technical issues - is correct, then the truth would have assuaged a lot of anger.  People have seen enough fail whales to accept that a feature might have to be pulled for the sake of system stability.  They might not be happy but they’d probably understand.

The problem with the Facebook and Twitter incidents is that their management act like big businesses when their products feel like small businesses.  Changing features in a social network I use without consulting me feels like they let themselves into my house and rearranged the furniture.  (Even big business can’t always do whatever they want: think New Coke.)

I’m left wondering whether the reason Facebook and Twitter are having trouble monetizing their platforms is that they don’t really understand what they’ve created.  Facebook tries to make money by selling advertising when many businesses are on Facebook to develop relationships because relationships are stronger than advertising.  A business has a much better opportunity to sell to a person they already have a realtionship with than a stranger.

My guess is that Twitter and Facebook users would like these platforms to make money because they want them to stay around.  But they also feel proprietary about these platforms.  Maybe these social networking companies should treat their platforms as an open commons and develop a business model similar to open source companies.  Using the platform is free, but have we got some great extensions for you.

I’m willing to bet that Twitter and Facebook have far more data available to them than can be garnered through their APIs.  Google makes money from it’s analytics package. Where’s Twitter Analytics or Facebook Analytics?

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First Impressions: TweetDeck vs. TwitZap

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

I have been using TweetDeck, a Twitter organizer, almost since I started tweeting.  TweetDeck is built on Adobe Air and therefore can be used on a number of platforms.

There are many features that I like about TweetDeck and one big problem: it’s a resource hog.  This may not be such a problem when my laptop returns from repairs but on the older desktop that I am typing on right now, it occasionally becomes a pain.  TweetDeck recently patched a memory leak which definitely improved the problem but my CPU cycles still run too high for my liking.

Looking for an alternative to TweetDeck, I started using TwitZap, a web-based Twitter organizer.  There is a lot to like about TwitZap, and I definitely intend to continue using it, but it won’t replace TweetDeck yet.

What both applications have in common is the ability to follow multiple Twitter timelines, starting with your replies and direct messages.  You can also follow the timelines of specific search terms, such as a Twitter name or a hash tag.  Both applications frequently poll Twitter for updates which makes it far easier to stay on top of Twitter.

One way they diverge is how they organize these different timelines.  TweetDeck groups the information into columns that you can move  into different positions depending on what you are focusing 0n.  However, if you follow a number of timelines, as I do, many of the columns are off screen, requiring you to scroll to view them. You can resize the columns to get a couple more columns on the screen.

TwitZap organizes the groups by sidebar tabs.  You can only view one group at a time but updates to the other groups are indicated by a number on a group’s tab indicating new posts.  Both applications make it very easy to add or delete groups.

The primary feature that makes TweetDeck the winner for me is that you can create groups that aggregate selected people that you are following.  That means that I can separate the people that I follow for their social marketing expertise from those that I follow for their web development expertise from those that I follow as personal friends.  Given the volume of tweets that are posted by the people that I am following (and which only grows as I follow additional people), this feature is essential for making Twitter a powerful businesss tool.  Twitter further enhances this functionality by allowing you to filter a column by entering a search term.

I definitely plan to continue using TwitZap to monitor the most current posts when my computer is resource challenged, but TweetDeck remains my Twitter organizer of choice.

Update: Since I wrote this entry I have discovered a big plus for TwitZap.  Quite obvious, really.  Since it is a web-based app I can access it from any computer.  That way I can view Twitter with my preferred settings no matter where I am.

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