{"id":5979,"date":"2017-06-16T11:39:07","date_gmt":"2017-06-16T16:39:07","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.getfivestars.com\/?p=5979"},"modified":"2017-06-16T11:39:07","modified_gmt":"2017-06-16T16:39:07","slug":"customers-build-defend-your-online-reputation","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/gatherup.com\/blog\/customers-build-defend-your-online-reputation\/","title":{"rendered":"How Customers Can Build & Defend Your Online Reputation"},"content":{"rendered":"
Here is something you probably see daily online. \u00a0An upset customer takes to the Internet to voice their disappointment with a business. \u00a0More and more it’s not just on review sites, it’s in your Twitter stream or your Facebook feed.<\/p>\n
I came across this post on my local community group page this week, the group has about 6,000 members.<\/p>\n
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To give you a little background, Little Caesars in my city used to be owned be another group who didn’t have a good reputation, in fact they had a horrible one. Not just with customers and reviews, but even with employees thanks to payroll issues. \u00a0Then about 3 months ago new owners came in, owned the customer service and employee issues, addressed them and turned many frustrated customers into fans. Thus Matt above stating the “New” Little Caesars.<\/p>\n
These are the types of reviews the business was getting under the past ownership.<\/p>\n
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The majority of the time when a post like Matt’s above goes up, I see the angry mob go into action. \u00a0The majority of comments that follow are consumers with their own stories of disappointment with that business that decide to pile on with the angry mob mentality.<\/p>\n
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I’ve watched as a few loyal customers, friends of the business or even the staff\/owners try to jump in and help only to have the mob drown them out. \u00a0The quick take-away is if you have a lot more haters than fans, it’s hard to stop the angry mob.<\/p>\n
Pro Tip:<\/strong> You should know<\/strong><\/em> how many more fans (promoters) you have than haters (detractors). One more reason to use Net Promoter Score<\/a> with your customer feedback strategy.<\/p>\n In this case, the angry mob didn’t win. In fact, the mob turned out to be 2 or 3 people at most with over 50 comments as I write this defending the business, it’s owners and actually forming an angry mob on Matt who posted the complaint (I don’t know if that’s right either).<\/p>\n These customers knew the place was in bad shape, supported the new owners, gave them a chance and have been nothing but pleased with the turn-around of this Little Caesars location. \u00a0As you’ll see in the comments from the Facebook post below, customers alerted the owners (Scot & Paul) to the comment, defended them, cited their work to improve it and let Matt know his issues were small, ridiculous and not the normal.<\/p>\n In the first set of comments above, here is the biggest win, created by the owners themselves as their customers know they care.<\/p>\n “What I l love and what I have observed with the new owners is that they genuinely care about customer feedback.” – Emily<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Winning, big time. \u00a0Do your customers think this? \u00a0Would they openly tell others about your dedication to customer feedback?<\/p>\n You’ll notice above that the very first commenter tagged the owners Scot and Paul to alert them to this complaint. \u00a0Before they could respond, a dozen customers already had, letting that customer know he was wrong about the business, too critical of them and that he should communicate to the business, not Facebook.<\/p>\nHappy Customers To The Rescue<\/h2>\n
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The Owners Step In & Own It<\/h2>\n