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Adding another exciting event to your Community stocking - A live AMA session with CX Consultant and author, @Micah Solomon and Vice president, customer success, Freshworks, Disha Gosalia, where they will discuss how to successfully work with a customer who is upset, frustrated or disappointed.

Whether you are facing a challenge in this area, have a question or looking for quick takeaways to build your capacity for delighting customers, tune in as Micah takes you through his MAMA (method of service recovery) formula, Disha shares her DDD framework, and answers some of your burning questions.
 

This is another first on the Refresh Community, and we look forward to an exciting session with valuable takeaways.

 

Key Information

Date: 14th December

Time: 8:00 AM PST / 4:00 PM GMT / 9:30 PM IST

Topic: How to delight unhappy customers

Link: Watch it right here, or live on LinkedIn.

 

WATCH THE CHAT LIVE :arrow_down:
 

 

Comment your questions down below, and tune in to see what Micah and Disha have to say.

 

Here’s the link to catch it LIVE on LinkedIn.


See you then! 

Question: What should a CS agent do when they can tell that following company policy is making an unhappy customer even unhappier?


Super excited! Tagging some of our members who might want to see this :)

@s.woodrow@hq@prithi.pillay@jake.carden@yvoheinen@antony.pain@zachary.king@nmollet@Sophie Murgatroyd@Aazir@n.baumsteiger@alex_10481@bart-jan.wolters@cbarina@rick.murphy@stefan.letko@fbn@tyler.brandt@sam.spence@i.cameron@peter.smith@aaron.nichols@petey 


Question: Is there anything that can be done post an interaction with an unhappy company? (to essentially prevent a similar situation from cropping up). If yes, what are some steps?


Question: How can one win back trust with a customer who has had a very disappointing experience previously and give them a truly fulfilling experience?


How can agents respond to requests from customers that they know cannot be provided atleast in the short term? Some customers may get defensive or upset when they hear that something they had requested isn’t possible.


How to deal with an upset customer who has already started to berate the company on social media? 


Question: What can you do to prevent customer flare ups? Are there any leading indicators of an impending outburst? 


Hello - will this session be recorded as well?

Thanks!

Justin


Question: If we offer a gift card, coupon or over-amount refund to disappointed or unhappy customers is it perceived as a bribe? I mean, sometimes, such an offer may look like a bribe like we try to mute the customer on social media :)


Hi There,

 

Will this be recorded by any chance ? I am located in Australia and this will be around 2am here ?

 

Thanks,

 

kay


Hey, @Kay.Jay and @JustinL,

The session will definitely be recorded, and available for you to view at your convenience, right here, on this thread.

If you have a question for Micah, please feel free to add it here, and he will take it up during the event. :) 

Hope this helps!

Best,

Rhea


Hey folks!

We are exactly 1 hour away from going live with @Micah Solomon and Disha Gosalia. Tune in right here or on the Freshworks LinkedIn page to catch the action as they take on your questions and more. 

See you there!

Cheers,
Rhea


I’m looking forward to this :)


One thing that puzzles me is when CS agents make the customer that wants help even angrier than they were to start with. What should companies be doing to prevent this? Plus, to help agents identify when it’s happening despite the preventative measures.


One thing that puzzles me is when CS agents make the customer that wants help even angrier than they were to start with. What should companies be doing to prevent this? Plus, to help agents identify when it’s happening despite the preventative measures.

Hah! Just realised that I’d already asked something similar :)


Question: What should a CS agent do when they can tell that following company policy is making an unhappy customer even unhappier?

This was a great question, Stephen, that we were delighted to address in the live session.  Happy to follow up as needed, too. Thanks! 

 

Micah Solomon 

Featured Influencer

Author •  Forbes Senior Contributor • Customer Service Consultant

President and CEO, Four Aces Inc. 

484-343-5881

Click here to chat live with Micah

micah@micahsolomon.com • micahsolomon.com 

 

Question: If we offer a gift card, coupon or over-amount refund to disappointed or unhappy customers is it perceived as a bribe? I mean, sometimes, such an offer may look like a bribe like we try to mute the customer on social media :)

 

This was a great question, Finn (cool name, too!)  that we were delighted to address in the live session.  Happy to follow up as needed, too. Thanks! 

PS :the VERY short version of the answer was: “no, it won’t be. However, it depends on context whether it is received well.  If your boss’s 80,000$ convertible dies on the highway the day she bought it, and the dealership offers her a $5 gift card….that’s not good. 

 

Micah Solomon 

Featured Influencer

Author •  Forbes Senior Contributor • Customer Service Consultant

President and CEO, Four Aces Inc. 

484-343-5881

Click here to chat live with Micah

micah@micahsolomon.com • micahsolomon.com 

 
 

One thing that puzzles me is when CS agents make the customer that wants help even angrier than they were to start with. What should companies be doing to prevent this? Plus, to help agents identify when it’s happening despite the preventative measures.

This was a great question too.  For those who didn’t hear the live event, we answered to be careful of the language you use, careful to not interrupt the customer/not try to solve the issue before they’ve had a chance to vent, and more. 

 

Micah Solomon 

Featured Influencer

Author •  Forbes Senior Contributor • Customer Service Consultant

President and CEO, Four Aces Inc. 

484-343-5881

Click here to chat live with Micah

micah@micahsolomon.com • micahsolomon.com 

 

Question: What can you do to prevent customer flare ups? Are there any leading indicators of an impending outburst? 

 

This was a great question, Meeta, that we were delighted to address in the live session.  Happy to follow up as needed, too. Thanks! 

PS the short answer was: 

• There are technical solutions that claim to help (sentiment analysis, including from Freshworks)

• You can certainly (often) hear it in their voice or in their words on email. 

• Most important is to not further exasperate them or exacerbate the issue:  Using defensive language (“that’s not what happened”; “that’s not true”; “you shouldn’t have/should have...”) will likely do just that.  As will some phrases like “I’m not going to argue with you” or “as seen in our documentation/policy.”

 

Micah Solomon 

Featured Influencer

Author •  Forbes Senior Contributor • Customer Service Consultant

President and CEO, Four Aces Inc. 

484-343-5881

Click here to chat live with Micah

micah@micahsolomon.com • micahsolomon.com 

 

How can agents respond to requests from customers that they know cannot be provided atleast in the short term? Some customers may get defensive or upset when they hear that something they had requested isn’t possible.

 

This was a great question, Sebastian, that we were delighted to address in the live session.  Happy to follow up as needed, too. Thanks! 

PS the very short version of the answer we gave: Don’t panic: don’t assume that the customer’s initial response/claim/flare-up is how they will feel later on.  e.g., “I’ll never work with you if you don’t get this feature added by Friday” is probably not ultimately how it will play out. 

Micah Solomon 

Featured Influencer

Author •  Forbes Senior Contributor • Customer Service Consultant

President and CEO, Four Aces Inc. 

484-343-5881

Click here to chat live with Micah

micah@micahsolomon.com • micahsolomon.com 

 

How to deal with an upset customer who has already started to berate the company on social media? 

 

This was a great question, Gowrirao, that we were delighted to address in the live session.  Happy to follow up as needed, too. Thanks! 

PS the very short answer was: 

• reach out to them VERY quickly, offering to work with them via DM (you don’t want the world watching you try to resolve this in near-real time) 

• when you have succeeded in making them happy and you’re SURE they’re on your side, consider asking them to update or delete their negative post(s).  But be careful with this. 

• Avoid the Streisand effect (drawing more attn to the issue by over-reacting). 

 

Micah Solomon 

Featured Influencer

Author •  Forbes Senior Contributor • Customer Service Consultant

President and CEO, Four Aces Inc. 

484-343-5881

Click here to chat live with Micah

micah@micahsolomon.com • micahsolomon.com 

 

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