by
Gordon McLean, on
September 8, 2010, in
Company Voice, about
crm, customer experience, scrm, Self-service, Social CRM, social customer, social media, techciboodle.
In a couple of weeks time I’m going to an industry conference where I’ll be standing in front of a room of fellow professionals and talking about social media models and the different ways they can be used to create, disseminate, and collect information. Unfortunately last night instead of diligently researching and preparing my presentation I was at the cinema watching Some Like It Hot (yes, the Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, and Jack Lemmon movie). I mention this only as a means to highlight the fact that I am far from being an expert when it comes to how best to use social media.
That said, as we are hurtling forwards with our plans to unleash Ciboodle Crowd within our own developer community website, I guess it’s safe to say that I’m not a beginner either. Hey, if nothing else it’ll give me something to talk about when I’m at the conference.
The crossover of information as part of the customer experience remains an interesting one and with social media driving more and more informal interactions between customers, it’s becoming more prevalent in both my profession (Technical Communications) and the wider Customer Relationship Management industry. Continue reading…
In 1605, William Camden wrote that “The proof of the pudding is in the eating”, and over 400 hundred years later, we are about to find out just how tasty the latest offering from the Sword Ciboodle sweet trolley is… and I think that’s quite enough of that metaphor. I’m talking, of course, about Ciboodle Crowd.
For a while now I’ve been involved in building and maintaining our developer community website TechCiboodle and, as we continue to look to improve, we’ve been looking at a variety of different social media driven features and solutions, specifically those aimed at helping our users share the domain and experience knowledge they all have.
Continue reading…
If you have a problem, if no one else can help, and if you can find them, maybe you can hire…
Ok ok, so maybe they aren’t quite the A-Team but the opening dialogue to that classic 80s TV show sums up why most of us turn to a customer service call center when we have a problem with our product.
The reason we contact them is for one thing; we want them to give us a solution to our problem, and no, we don’t want to wait to get it.
Continue reading…