Featured Posts

Beyond Groupon: Localized Deal Sites If you're like thousands of Americans, you've discovered the magic of Groupon-- when Groupon held a 50% in GAP stores last week nationwide, they sold hundreds of thousands of them, crashing the system...

Read more

Have You Been To LikeButton.Me Yet? The recently-launched website LikeButton.Me is a quick look at what Facebook is trying to accomplish with their new OpenGraph platform. If you are already logged into Facebook in your browser, you and...

Read more

How Sharing Links With UTM Tags Can Produce Incorrect... Many in-house and agency search marketers use UTM (Urchin Tracking Module) tags to sort and filter their Google Analytics results for their website traffic. UTM tags are added to the end of a link and...

Read more

3 Easy Things To Rank Higher on GoogleBy Eric ReaGoogle prides itself on finding the most relevant websites to place at the top of its results based on several factors. While search engine optimization is a continuous process, there...

Read more

Preventing a Cluster Around the Water Cooler: T-Mobile’s Twitter Nightmare

Posted by kelsey | Posted in Business, Featured | Posted on 08-10-2009

Tags: ,

0

Oct. 9, 2009 UPDATE: #Tmobilestillsucks was a brief trending topic this morning on Twitter. Looks like people are still annoyed! :)
Earlier this week, the trending topic #Tmobilesucks (and other variations) became a huge hit on Twitter. That means that THOUSANDS of people were talking about how much T-Mobile “sucks” and what they don’t like about it.
How can T-Mobile even begin to fix this public relations nightmare?! There is no way that they can reach out to every person that is complaining about their service via social media (and literal word of mouth). People take information they find out from their friends or followers on facebook, digg, twitter, etc. and pass it on, just like gossip around the water cooler. Except in this case, the “water cooler” turns out to have a reach of thousands (or even millions) of people in a time span of a day to even a few hours.
For many businesses, bad press may be a given problem with any nationwide service. However, social media can take one person’s complaints and spread them faster than the bubonic plague. The epic proportions of social media make it impossible for any organization to be completely on top of what everyone is saying about them, all the time.
However, there are some proactive steps companies can take in order to stay up-to-date (as best they can) with what people are saying about them online.
Google Alerts- Set up a free Google Alert that sends an email every week, day, or as-it-happens to your email for each instance someone blogs or writes about your company online. Go to the News Section of the site, search for your company name, and then there will be an option to set-up an alert.
Social Mention- Social Mention is a free service that allows you to search for company names, topics, or individual’s names. It also has free analytics, like major keywords, if the “talk” is mostly positive or negative, etc. You can also subscribe to these terms, much like Google Alerts.
Twitter Mentions- Regularly looking at ‘@’ mentions on your Twitter account shows people who are talking to you, repeating what you say, and crediting (or criticizing) you for something.
Just staying proactive and top of what people are saying (not only about your company specifically) will help you maintain a positive image online.
Share
  • Print
  • Sphinn
  • FriendFeed
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Share/Bookmark

Related posts:

  1. Creating a Niche for Mobile Internet and Social Networking
  2. Use TwitRand to Hold Twitter Contests
  3. How to Use Hashtags on Twitter To Increase Traffic and Followers
  4. Twitter: The New American Superhero?
  5. Twitter Fiction

Write a comment

CommentLuv Enabled

Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree Plugin