Social Media | On Tolerance

If we’re transparent and honest, negative comments can become opportunities to improve customer relationships.

If you’re on social media for any length of time, you’re eventually going to offend someone, even if you don’t mean to. It’s bad enough when you accidentally anger someone on a personal account, but when one of your business’s social accounts offends someone, that can be particularly fraught. Online reviews and reputation are hugely important to businesses nowadays, so much so that companies will mention Yelp or other reviews in their advertising, and sometimes even hire reputation management consultants to make sure nothing negative shows up in a search.

Realistically, it’s impossible to have only positive reviews and interactions. Even if a business is local, the internet is global. An ad, a post, or a negative review can go viral and attract the wrong sort of attention. Getting angry messages on your Facebook page or Twitter feed is upsetting. When people attack your business, it feels like they’re attacking you personally. The instinct to reciprocate with more venom, or just delete everything, is perfectly understandable.

But the best way to deal with angry customers or offended strangers is to take a step back from the situation and find some emotional distance. This is where tolerance comes in handy. Remember that the person who posted the negative comment is coming at this from a different place. Maybe he or she has a different cultural background, or even a different vocabulary. The fact that someone was upset by something you posted doesn’t make him a bad person any more than your unintentionally offensive post makes you a bad person.

I once offended someone on Twitter when I was trying to agree with her. This writer complained about people who wrote badly about things they hadn’t experienced personally. I replied something like, “You can’t write well if you don’t understand and aren’t willing to learn.” The writer thought the “you” in my reply was referring to her! She got terribly offended that I’d called her ignorant and a bad writer, and her followers piled on. I eventually explained that I meant “a person who isn’t willing to learn can’t write well.” But it took a lot of patience and tolerance for me to continue the dialogue and see her point of view.

That experience made me more careful about what I write online. I often say “a person” or “one” instead of using the generic “you” now, just to avoid misunderstanding. And that is why it’s not necessarily a bad thing to get negative feedback — we can learn from it. If we’re transparent and honest, negative comments can become opportunities to improve customer relationships.

Top public relations firms recommend this formula for dealing with negative comments and reviews on social media: be polite, show concern, be transparent, and correct the problem (if there is one) without excuses. They also recommend, after acknowledging the issue, taking the conversation private, to email or DM (direct messages). Limiting further dialogue to just you and the original commenter stops the conversation from snowballing and getting too many people involved.

On social media, it can be easy to say the wrong thing or to misread someone’s words without the helpful cues of facial expression and tone of voice. But that shouldn’t stop businesses from using social media to communicate with customers. As long as messages are crafted thoughtfully, with an eye toward engaging people instead of simply provoking, the internet provides a place for rich and rewarding conversations.

Picture of Susanna King

Susanna King

Susanna King is the Co-owner of Flourish Media, a social media marketing company here in Aiken. She has a degree in multimedia design and has worked in the online media industry for over two decades.
Picture of Susanna King

Susanna King

Susanna King is the Co-owner of Flourish Media, a social media marketing company here in Aiken. She has a degree in multimedia design and has worked in the online media industry for over two decades.

In the know

Related Stories

Honesty + Leadership | Palmetto Bella

Honesty + Leadership

Leadership is influence, and we each influence those around us. What type of influence would you like to create? Having a vision or purpose for life empowers actions to be executed with intent and a desired result. Leadership in action is the best way to create influence. There are two ways to influence — by reason or by force. Living with reason is fundamental to safety, education, and progress; actions without reason, morality, or understanding are dangerous. One of the most unique characteristics we have as human beings is the ability to choose. Who is in control of your choices? Who is responsible for your emotions, intentions, and reactions? Do

Read More »
Being Human | Palmetto Bella

Being Human

If there is one nugget of advice that we should take away from 2020, it is to be human. It sounds like such a simple request, but is often lacking in a business setting. We celebrate love (among other things) in the month of February. Love is a strong word, but loving one another is the basis of our humanity, so how can we love one another in the workplace? Angela Ahrendts, Senior VP at Apple, said, “Everyone talks about building a relationship with your customer. I think you build one with your employees first.” Whether or not you want to be, you are in relationship with the people you

Read More »
What’s Next? | Palmetto Bella

What’s Next?

The new year has arrived, and the expectations are for things to be better than in 2020. That is exactly the forecast from most investment firms. Billions of dollars will be pumped into the economy this year, and that will generate additional spending. More spending means more goods sold, and when more goods are sold, more profits are made. When more profits are made, the stocks of those companies are in more demand, and that results in higher stock prices. It really is not that complicated. You just need to figure out which of those companies will produce the goods that people want to buy, and then how long people

Read More »
In Transit… | Palmetto Bella

In Transit…

I placed the order on December 10, in plenty of time for delivery by Christmas. It shipped, by First Class Mail for $4.75, on December 11. When it had not arrived a week later, I asked for the tracking number, and then I checked the tracking history each day (see below). For several days the tracking history showed a mysterious message that later disappeared: Your package will arrive later than expected, but is still on its way. It is currently in transit to the next facility. My package sat in Florida for 4 days, and then took 10 days to make it to North Atlanta (by mule perhaps?). Once in

Read More »