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Social Media - Toolkit for HR Managers Part II

5/16/2017

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If you have read Part I on this topic (below) you are up to speed on the impetus for this post.  Social media and smartphone technology are amazing, they have made the world smaller and brought us all closer together, I don’t go anywhere without my smartphone in the off chance I get to take my next best Instagram pic.

For those of you that work with the public we have to assume that every customer has a smartphone on them and as we have learned recently, customers will use them to protect themselves, to shame people or companies into giving them what they feel they deserve or even to use in threat of legal action.  Given recent events I think it is important to be proactive of our new social media world and ensure employees have tools to rely on when faced with these types of situations.  Customers will not hesitate to use social media to get attention.  A true example I witnessed, a couple who had just checked into a hotel room actually created a brand new twitter account just to post pics of issues in their room with hashtags directed at the company, they never picked up the phone or followed “standard lines of communication” to get assistance, they just lobbed a twitter grenade at the hotel and waited… sure enough they got a ton of attention after that. 

Here are four tools I think every HR team should have in their tool box to create stronger social media awareness.

Legislation - The laws and rules will be different depending on your region.  Most local legislation states that to photograph or film a person requires that persons consent, and to continue to photograph and film without consent can lead to law enforcement becoming involved.  When photographing or filming a group of people en masse does not require individual consent.  It is important to know the local laws of your land and educate your employees on them and how to communicate them to customers when in these situations.

Procedures - The strongest buildings stand the test of time because of a solid foundation, procedures are the foundation that will proactively prevent heated use of social media as a means to complain.  JetBlue is a great example of a company with common sense and balanced procedures that helped them weather their own recent drama after removing a whole family from a flight to Vegas.  In the United Airlines incident where the passenger was dragged off the aircraft, bloodied by law enforcement, there lacked clear protocol that could have helped prevent or reduce the social media backlash they received.   For JetBlue, anytime the decision is made to deplane a guest, and after several attempts at polite request to disembark, their procedure is to deplane the entire aircraft, this is fantastic out of the box thinking as it removes all the “tinder” to the potential fire and with all guests leaving the aircraft what is the remaining guest to do?  All of this is handled with grace and polite communication. JetBlue has clearly thought about any possible guest friction their policies could create and it is clearly working for them when you view social media feedback on them, versus other airlines. 

Training - Solid user friendly procedures without training is a waste of time, for everyone.  Educating employees on corporate social media policy is important and should not only happen once in a classroom.  Use innovative techniques such as in the minute training during team or tool box meetings.  Use of e-learning and sharing recent examples from actual social media will help to keep the topic front of mind.  As technology continues to evolve training on social media awareness should be an ongoing event.  Training should not be just for those working in guest facing positions, supervisors, managers and back of house employees should also be included.  

Awareness - It is impossible for anyone to memorise every single policy and procedure, we also know that training has retention of up to 10%.  How do we ensure our employees will be prepared if a guest suddenly shoves a camera phone in the face?  Keep the conversation going! Discuss social media awareness in team meetings, one-on-ones, ensure that your front line supervisors are acting as coaches to ensure the established procedures are being followed and that they are working and use a tactical approach to assist and mentor any employee that could be at risk of a social media tear down.

Is social media and the use of smartphones by customers something that is on your radar? do you have procedures and training to prepare your employees should they be faced with a situation like United Airlines or JetBlue?  If not we may see your company thrust into social media firestorm one day…

#CiaoCiao

Jeff

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Social Media - Toolkit for HR Managers Part I

5/16/2017

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By now you have all seen the headline, or even watched the jarring video of a male passenger being dragged off of an aircraft, screaming and bloodied.  The United Airlines flight 3411 incident that took place in Chicago was very interesting to me.  I spent 12 years in the airline industry so I tend to view aviation related events through a few different lenses.

When the story first broke, it seemed like the usual overly sensational news about another unruly passenger being removed from an aircraft.  This does not sway me as this happens if not hundreds, but thousands of times a day around the world.  I watched the main video that was all over social media and aside from the chaos that took place in the cabin of that aircraft I was floored to see the explosive way that this story spread not only on traditional media, but the wildfire it created on Facebook, Twitter etc.  The comment threads that I reviewed were angry, judgmental, and very opinionated.  The whole sphere of social media was out for blood and the mass online condemnation caused United Airlines stock to plummet in value by one billion dollars in the first 24 hours.  

United tried in vain to turn the tide, releasing several statements that were not received by the public well, the first was supportive of the employees and their actions and this caused mass anger again towards the airline.  The public hatred towards United Airlines did not begin to turn around until the CEO came out and took full blame for the event, announced major procedural promises and changes and offered compensation to every passenger onboard flight 3411, the airline had dug themselves into a hole with no way out and had to make unrealistic promises that it cannot keep.  What surprised me most by this point, was that although the poor finesse of how this situation was handled, United Airlines was actually in the right.  I am not defending the injuries sustained by the gentleman involved, the fact is, based on federal law and established policy United had every right to take all the steps that they did, and yet because of the prevalence of smart phones and social media, being right or wrong did not matter, the public made up their mind and wanted to punish United for it. 

But why did the public turn so negatively toward United? Because of the social media firestorm.  People were posting and re-posting articles and videos with highly sensational, angry, opinionated statements.  People like to be heard and with social media, everyone has their own soapbox,  truth, facts, and objectivity ceased to matter.  This issue is not going to go away, since the United 3411 incident there have been several other airline related incidents that have also played out on social media.  Recently JetBlue was the subject of this amazing hyped up headline “Family kicked off flight to Vegas for stowing birthday cake in overhead bin”.  This could have gone poorly for JetBlue but it didn’t, there are several factors.  JetBlue has clearly established policies, procedures and training in place that are good for both the company AND the customer.  JetBlue CEO Robin Hayes was even interviewed on a morning news programme and was eloquently able to defend his employees and the decisions they made, he backed this up with facts related to the case, the training provided to the employees and the applicable laws and regulations.  

In todays world we are literally surrounded by smart phone technology where anyone can film or photograph whatever is happening around them.  So, how do we prepare for this new world where social media can take one incident and ruin a person or a companies reputation?  We will explore strategies for this in Part II of this topic. 

#TweetWell​

Jeff

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