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Fanatical Brand Protection on Twitter

With Twitter being the new darling of the blogosphere there’s plenty of talk about how to promote your brand and business on there.

What there’s less talk about is how to use it to protect your brand. Here’s a great example from a big company.

A Little bit of Background
We recently moved all of our hosting infrastructure to Rackspace. With the ridiculously high levels of growth we’ve had with our online accounting software, I wanted to be sure we could scale up the hardware very quickly if we needed to. Rackspace were the obvious choice.

The level of service we’d received from Rackspace was OK. It wasn’t great, but it wasn’t poor. From a company that has trademarked the term “Fanatical Support” I did expect sonewhat more than I’d been receiving.

Back to Twitter
Now a lot of the posts (or ‘tweets’) on Twitter are just random thoughts as opposed to carefully crafted marketing messages. At least what I post anyway. This can lead to “brain leaks” where you get an insight into what is on someones mind from their tweet. On Tuesday, I posted “rackspace change my account manager as frequently as my bank. Fanatical?”.

 

Shortly after I get a message on twitter from one of Rackspaces Vice Presidents in the US saying “@DuaneJackson Many apologies for those AM changes Duane. Want to improve there and I am interested in your feedback. fmendler @ rackspace”

So I dropped the guy an email. He then put me in touch with the Operations Director for EMEA who called me, outside of office hours to have a chat. It turns out they’d started off badly on managing my account which is why I wasn’t left with the warm feeling they like to make sure most of their customer are left with.

I’ve now had a good chat with my account manager, have a better understanding of what Rackspace can do for me and am a much, much happier bunny.

So Rackspace now have a very happy customer and a positive blog posting, rather than (potentially) one slagging them off. All because my brain leaked onto Twitter, and Rackspace were sensible enough to be monitoring mentions of their name.

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This entry was posted on Friday, February 27th, 2009 at 12:43 pm and is filed under Technology. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

5 Responses to “Fanatical Brand Protection on Twitter”

  1. Absolutely.

    There are a lot of other angles to take with Twitter too – I use Twitterfall (http://twitterfall.com/) to monitor a few terms at intervals.

    Specifically our company name, and some keywords which are integral to services we are offering and marketing.

    If nothing else, it provides some interesting analysis on the userbase of Twitter..

  2. Richard Glynn says:

    It would seem Rackspace are basically good guys.

    It’s funny how generally, a private complaint letter/email detailing serious service concerns can take weeks to prompt a response.

    Yet your very public mild disatisfaction on Twitter enjoys a lightning quick reaction.

    Twitter power!

  3. Sue Harrison says:

    Great blog post Duane.

    I also mentioned Rackspace (positively!) on Twitter a few weeks ago and almost instantly had contact from 3 of their guys. I was impressed.

    Twilerts tell me when studentgems comes up on Twitter and I’ve been alerted to several business customers who have mentioned us. Happily all good and no complaints yet, but if I do ever see any I will now know to do exactly what Rackspace did for you.

  4. gwawr says:

    Rackspace clearly have a ticket on the cluetrain. Marvellous.

  5. Rackspace is the best hosting company imho. I’ve worked with them on behalf of several clients and have always had far better experiences with them than with any other hosting company.

    Interestingly, Network Solutions have started using Twitter in a similar way. For such a simple social networking tool, especially one which has been criticized as having little business application, it is certainly proving useful to many companues. Go Twitter!

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