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Friday May 18, 2012





Through the Lens

Definition: The Elements of Success in Community Support

Beginning around 1980, with the proliferation of threaded-message discussion forums on CompuServe covering a variety of hardware and software technology products and companies, to today’s multifaceted social media, the concept of tapping a customer base / community for customer support purposes has a long history.  Some companies have been very successful, and others have seen the opposite outcome.  Along the way, some vital lessons have been learned that have remained consistent despite the advances and changes in the underlying communication technologies.  The key elements of success in community-based Support begin with a clear Strategy covering purpose, methodology/tactics and outcomes, followed by effective Marketing of the resource and setting of appropriate expectations, Management of all facets of the community interactions — and efficient handling of the aftermath of the conversations.  As more and more companies accelerate product and focus to the SaaS/Cloud model, these elements are more important than ever before.

The Strategy of Community Support

Many companies have perceived online community support as just a way to reduce employee staffing and cut costs by deflecting calls away from the customer contact center.  Some monumental public relations disasters have been the result of such short-sightedness as online firestorms have erupted with no one assigned to monitor or deal with them.  Opening a door, especially in the online world, can have far-reaching consequences.  The first step towards success is developing a consistent strategy that covers all aspects of the online experience.

What do you want to make happen through the use of social media for support?  How does that map to your overall business strategy?  There is a wide spectrum of customer-company conversations; which ones do you want to encourage through which channels?  How about customer-to-customer conversations?  Where do they fit into your community support strategy and how will you encourage them?  How will the various channels be used together, so that a conversation might begin in a forum and end in the creation and resolution of a support case?  Or vice-versa?  Which aspects of the online experience will you use for marketing purposes, and which for support?  Most importantly, how will you measure the results and keep everything aligned with that strategy?

The Marketing of Community Support

Opening a support forum is only the beginning; you can’t stop there and expect to succeed.  From before the start, it’s vital to properly set expectations about what the resource is intended to offer, and how it will be managed.  Once opened, there is still a vital need to let people know that the resource is there, the value it has to offer to them and what’s going on in it on a regular basis.

Many forum / discussion applications allow for each user to flag particular topics so that any subsequent posts by anyone automatically generate a notification email, even permit response from that email.  Some forums permit periodic general updates to be emailed out, notifying all members of new discussions and activity.  Be sure to let individuals set their preferences for such notifications.

The Management of Community Support Resources

One of the best uses in my experience of an online discussion forum is in the creation of small working groups who can pool their knowledge and expertise to address a particular issue.  In the process, bonds may be forged between the experts to create a functional community and a resource of considerable value to those experts, to the company and to the members and participants of the forum at large.  It’s important to realize that the conversation can be as valuable as the answer that is finally developed.  To produce a good conversation often takes a skilled facilitator or leader, and this is especially true in forum work.  Every discussion forum needs a Moderator, or a team of moderators, who read everything that is posted and ensure that the discussion stays civil and on-topic as much as possible.  Be sure that you have trained those moderators to understand very clearly how their tactical decisions and activities tie into your overall strategy.

What Comes After

The biggest barrier to effective use of a support forum is the “noise” factor.  Newcomers tend to create new threads for questions that have already been answered.  Some conversational threads may go on for literally hundreds of entries before a viable solution is worked out.  If these topic threads are permitted to remain, it will become increasingly difficult to find anything worthwhile, and the forum will tend to decline in effectiveness.  At the same time, too few discussions can discourage visitors and set an impression of overall inactivity.  Here is where the role of the monitors is especially important, for they should be the ones who turn completed conversations into knowledge articles before archiving the thread and removing it from view.

To prevent unnecessary duplication of topics, the forum software should prompt the member through the creation process to look at other threads that may be relevant to the issue.  Unfortunately, even this method may not catch all of the duplicates, so there needs to be effective pruning and moving functionality so that the duplicates can be merged into one as appropriate.

Choosing a Vendor/Application

Start your review by looking at the websites of your competitors.  What features are in play?  Why?  What’s their strategy?  What are the strengths and weaknesses you see in their offerings?  Next, visit the websites of some of the leading vendors of technologies used for online community support & discussion, companies such as GetSatisfaction, Jive Software and Lithium.

The standard features and functionality of a typical online discussion group are essentially commodities at this point in the industry’s development.  There are several very good open-source packages available for free downloading and use that will enable you to establish a basic foundation.  Going the free software route, however, leaves the entire burden of getting value from the exercise on you.  If you’re an online social media expert in your own right, this may be enough.  For most companies, however, much more is needed.  In my opinion, the first point on the vendor/application evaluation and selection checklist is: does the prospective vendor have a Customer Success team that will fully engage with you from the initial design phase all the way through to continuing maintenance and management of your new online resourced?  If not, look elsewhere.

Follow-through

Strategy. Marketing, Managing; none are one-time events in the life of a successful community support resource.  All are ongoing efforts, necessary to keep a consistent program producing quality results.  The beginning, and most crucial element is that of strategy.  Defining a strategy for your community / social media program is not something to take lightly.  If you don’t have professional-grade expertise already on your staff, then look outside for assistance.

If you have questions about this article, please submit a comment or join us for a complimentary Office Hours session.

Recommended Reading

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    For over thirty years, Mikael Blaisdell has been writing about customer retention through support and service.  Long before Customer Relationship Management became an industry, he was engaging in online discussions via the early time-sharing resources and sharing insights and best practices in published articles and columns in the print media.

    The Papers listed here are in chronological order and are located in three Libraries.  The titles are direct links to the articles.  Access to materials in The HotLine Magazine Library is free, but registration and login are required. Access to materials in The HotLine Research Library is available only to Research Members.

    By Mikael Blaisdell

    Moving to the Cloud: Transitioning Your Support Technology Suite Published in the March/April 2011 issue of the Help Desk Institute’s SupportWorld Magazine, this paper covers the process of selecting cloud-based support center tools.  The basic reality of the profession of technological and customer support is that the only constant is change, and nowhere is this more evident than in its toolset.    From the very first commercial case and knowledge management systems that replaced steno pads and 3-ring binders, the “shouter-base” and an incredible array of homebrew resources 25 years ago, the contact center management industry has come a long way.  What could only be dreamed of a few years ago has become commonplace.  Now we are starting another huge development in the support technology suite, the transition to the Cloud.  There are significant advantages to be realized in that shift, but the journey is not without its risks.  As with everything else in high-tech, the keys to success are careful planning and execution.

    SaaS, Cloud Computing & The Redefinition of Customer Support.  Initially published by SupportWorld, the magazine of The Help Desk Institute, in the July/August 2010 issue, this article identifies issues and challenges confronting both external and internal Customer Support professionals alike.

    The Case for Remote Support Technology :  The rationale for investing in remote support technologies is very straightforward.  The pressure of razor-thin product margins and closely scrutinized IT budgets constantly reinforce the awareness that every second counts in the effort to increase support effectiveness while lowering cost.  Any reduction in the amount of time that a problem case stays open automatically furthers two vital goals: the customer’s return to full productivity, and the rep’s availability to respond to other problems.  Further, the technical competence and emotional rapport displayed during the support interaction has a significant effect on continuing customer satisfaction and loyalty.

    Selecting Remote Support Technology (Includes Vendor List)(Research Library)Remote Support Technology (RST) is a very important capability to have for any Support/Service team providing assistance to technology users/customers.  There is an extensive range of features and functionality available in the currently marketed RST products by the various vendors.  This paper provides a list of The HotLine Magazine’s recommended criteria for selecting an RST resource.  The recommendations are intended to be used by prospective purchasers of RST products as a starting point for the development of their own customized list of specifications.

    The SaaS & Support Project Research Report 2009(Research Library) In late 2009, data was collected from a single survey that included questions about what software vendors, both SaaS and those transitioning to SaaS at that point, were doing about customer retention in the areas of Strategy, Process, People and Technology.  The data was supplemented and enhanced by online research in ongoing interviews with senior executives, and the Report was published in late December.

    Engineering vs. Support: How To Play The Game.  First published in the premier issue of Customer Support Management Magazine in 1997, this article talks about how savvy Support managers and executives can go about changing the relationship between Support and Engineering/Development.  More than a decade later, the article has useful information that can make a difference in today’s companies — for those willing to take a leadership role.

     

    Published: April 13, 2011

    Revised: November 3, 2011