Social Media and Business Ethics

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Social Media and Business Ethics

Prior to my involvement in social media and new media, customers were exactly that – just customers. Rows in a database, indexed by various criteria, points of data making a beautiful line, so to speak. As an online business, my company, the Student Loan Network, never had to really deal with customers all that much, since almost all transactions were digital, almost all were automated, and almost all were without incident. Having a customer base that was a complete commodity also made business decisions relatively easy – send newsletters and notices X number of times a month, accept X percentage unsubscribe rates, calculate X percentage revenue from the clickstream.

To be perfectly candid, we never really had to think about the customer as a human being.

Sure, we said we did, just like everyone else, but if you had asked me off the top of my head to name three customers without opening a SQL command line, I’d have given you a blank look.

Social media changed all that. From the day I got my first piece of feedback as a podcaster, social media changed how I, and how the Student Loan Network, interacts with its customers. Suddenly, at the other end of the command line output, there were human beings I knew by name, and even call friends. I’ve had lunch with a few.

More importantly, when I go to write a newsletter, a blog post, or an episode of the Financial Aid Podcast, I have to consciously think about what level of quality I’m creating, about what value I’m creating, because it’s no longer just about percentage clicks from the clickstream, it’s about making sure that when Ricky, Fernando, Leah, Nolan, James, and many others get the content I create, they get some value out of it.

Sure, some days will be better than others, but I know that personally knowing customers makes a huge difference in how you approach your business. Being friends with customers radically changes how you do business, because ultimately, if you’re a person of sound ethics and morals, you don’t willfully screw your friends over. It’s the same general concept as requiring the children of elected officials to serve in the infantry of a country’s armed forces – there are real, personal consequences to every decision you make.

This is one of the many upsides of social media – the ability to transform your business into a human enterprise again, if you’re willing to be adventurous and take the risk of letting employees truly and openly communicate with customers and develop real relationships.


Comments

12 responses to “Social Media and Business Ethics”

  1. Good post. One question I have is “how optional is this business transformation you speak of?” You use the term “f you’re willing”, but isn’t the time coming when businesses that are unwilling to transform will become irrelevant? I’d love your thoughts.

  2. It’s optional insofar as good customer service is optional today. Are there companies thriving that have poor customer service? Just get on an airplane. Now, throw a company in the mix that is remarkable, that has good business fundamentals PLUS this transformation, and they’ll eat everyone’s lunch.

  3. Excellent article, Chris. 🙂

  4. I really like this post. I love the phrase “human enterprise,” and it fits solidly with what I like to say is the sweet spot of all these tools. I’m excited that it gives us the chance to be a human.

    Side note: I love your photo layout in the sidebar, and that drill one (is it a drill?) is a riot!

  5. Good post. One question I have is “how optional is this business transformation you speak of?” You use the term “f you’re willing”, but isn’t the time coming when businesses that are unwilling to transform will become irrelevant? I’d love your thoughts.

  6. It’s optional insofar as good customer service is optional today. Are there companies thriving that have poor customer service? Just get on an airplane. Now, throw a company in the mix that is remarkable, that has good business fundamentals PLUS this transformation, and they’ll eat everyone’s lunch.

  7. Excellent article, Chris. 🙂

  8. I really like this post. I love the phrase “human enterprise,” and it fits solidly with what I like to say is the sweet spot of all these tools. I’m excited that it gives us the chance to be a human.

    Side note: I love your photo layout in the sidebar, and that drill one (is it a drill?) is a riot!

  9. I knew I starred this post in Google Reader for a reason.

    You’re doing a great job treating your customers as people, Chris. It makes all the difference.

  10. I knew I starred this post in Google Reader for a reason.

    You’re doing a great job treating your customers as people, Chris. It makes all the difference.

  11. When I first started my web hosting business I was all about personalized customer support. I would reply to every single ticket even when one of my staff already handled it. This REALLY helped me get customers and keep customers. My customers would tell their friends about how good my support was and before I knew it word of mouth took over and I was getting customers every day

  12. When I first started my web hosting business I was all about personalized customer support. I would reply to every single ticket even when one of my staff already handled it. This REALLY helped me get customers and keep customers. My customers would tell their friends about how good my support was and before I knew it word of mouth took over and I was getting customers every day

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