23 Feb 2008 08:14:41 | Jeff Walters
In my previous article (Using Forums To Improve Customer
Relationship Management) I covered the learning/information
aspect of forums, as well as how you can use forums to
positively impact your lead generation efforts and customer
relationship management initiatives. Unfortunately, forums can
also have a dark side - in that they can seriously impact your
other forms of marketing if you choose to ignore or abuse them.
The negative impacts forums can have on your marketing efforts
are in part, the flip-side of the positive actions I recommended
you take:
* Dissatisfied Customers Voice Their Complaints
Aggrieved customers who are web-savvy can damage your
reputation with a few postings stating their dissatisfaction.
If these are isolated incidents, your satisfied customers will
often come to your defence, which should offset the negative
comments, and may even earn you some unexpected positive
publicity.
However, if others also start empathising with them, and
provide feedback of similar incidents of poor service or product
quality, your market reputation will suffer. There's not much
point in merely increasing your sales efforts. You need to
improve your product quality, and also improve your customer
relationship management and service.
* People Recommend Alternative Products To Yours
Questions are sometimes asked in forums regarding which product
or service is best for a particular business need. While
customers may not be at odds with you, if your product fails to
keep abreast with the competition, your customers will not
continue to recommend you. In fact, postings about other
products could cause a customer retention nightmare.
* You Display Your Lack of Professionalism
The quality of your postings - regular poor spelling, grammar,
lousy sentence structure, and posts in poor taste can
significantly downgrade readers' impressions of you. Infrequent
typos are not a big issue, but business-promoting posts that
show a consistent disregard to quality could give your prospects
some clue as to how you approach the rest of your business.
* Your Postings Reveal Flaws In Your Personality
Some forum members seem to forget that snide or intolerant
postings can be viewed by a large audience in the forum. These
postings can also linger for quite some time as well as get
unwanted negative publicity in the forums (members use the
posting as an example of how not to behave on the forum).
Your testy or ill-conceived comments can often be seen by
non-members. If the forum has been spidered by the search
engines. web searchers can also stumble across these postings.
If they are carrying out market research or due diligence on you
and your products, you can probably kiss those prospects goodbye.
A recent incident where my wife Gill asked me to investigate an
emailed 'business opportunity' illustrates the negative impact a
couple of forum postings can have.
Gill was reluctant to surrender her contact details to get more
information without knowing a little more about what the
opportunity was all about, so she asked me to see if I could
find out more details. The email address gave away the website,
which was a mini-site with a compelling sales letter. I did my
standard Google trick of 'website name' + 'scam', and found
several forum postings. One posting stated interest in the
site/opportunity, and what the poster wanted to know was whether
it was legitimate, or merely a scam.
The first response was from the website owner. Rather than
providing some reassurances, emphasizing guarantees and refund
policies, or even testimonials from satisfied customers, he
started berating his prospect for not contacting him directly
(rather silly, as the enquiry wanted to get impartial feedback,
not another sales pitch).
A forum member tried to smooth things over by stating that all
the prospect was doing was due diligence - which was his right.
The website owner then started attacking this member. At this
point several other forum members - several of whom were
actually interested in the advertised opportunity - all posted
that they had seen enough to decide to have nothing to do with
this irritable individual.
Forums can be a useful addition to your marketing toolkit. You
do, however, need to avoid some marketing minefields. Used
intelligently, they can help with both lead generation and
customer relationship management. Abuse them, or use them
carelessly, and they will drive away prospects and customers.
© 2005 Intellinova (Pty) Ltd. - All Rights Reserved This article
may be reprinted, provided it is published in its entirety,
includes the author bio information, and all links remain
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About Author :
For the past 20 years, Jeff Walters has transformed raw data
into profit-producing strategic information in various sectors -
banking, insurance, gambling, medical, government. He has lead
several data-to-information projects: ABC Costing, analytical
CRM, datamart development, and Balanced Scorecard.