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Questioning the impact of @ComcastCares

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Are customer-service successes on Twitter worth celebrating?

A debate of sorts broke out over that question during yesterday morning’s Social Media Breakfast in Ottawa during a presentation (slides embedded at the end of this post) by Tara Hunt@MissRogue, when she suggested that “@ComcastCares is a victim of our own nepotism.

Tara argued that Comcast’s efforts on Twitter and other social media channels are overhyped by an adoring crowd of social-media enthusiasts, even if customer-service problems and culture at the company remain largely unsolved and unchanged.

relayed the “nepotism” line in my Twitter stream, and Frank Eliason, the director of digital care at Comcast and the man leading the charge at @ComcastCares, quickly responded with this series of tweets:

Tweets from @ComcastCares' Frank Eliason in response to Tara Hunt's remarks at SMB Ottawa

Tara and Frank have since exchanged tweets with each other, and I expect a direct conversation between the two–and perhaps a face-to-face debate!–to follow.

But until then, the question remains: If good customer service through social media doesn’t trigger corresponding improvements throughout an organization, just how should we be talking about it?

Your Social Media Strategy Won’t Save You

 

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Bryan Person is the former LiveWorld Social Media Evangelist.

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