Over at The Daily Dot there was a truly
jaw-dropping story about Bank of America and its efforts to get on top of its
reputation challenges with a strong customer-relations ground game. The bank, like many other marketers, has taken to intervening in Twitter conversations that have expressed disenchantment.
For
example: Bank of America. “We'd be happy to review your account with you to discuss any concerns. Please let us know if you need assistance.”@BofA_Help
Maybe
we should applaud the bank for trying to regain trust one disaffected customer at a time. After all, it isn't easy when you are the embodiment of all corporate evil to win the hearts and minds of the
public.
But there are two aspects of this initiative that are troubling. One is that customer-relations sweet talk, no matter how thoughtfully applied, does nothing to address the malign
essence that has tarred a brand’s reputation in the first place. Relying on CRM to repair BofA is like treating melanoma with Clinique.
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The second thing -- and this is what was
jaw-dropping about The Daily Dot article -- is that Bank of America’s efforts have not been thoughtfully applied.
Oh, my. On the contrary. It is as if there were a meeting of top
managers who addressed the question “How do we absolutely cement for all time our image as a soulless engine of unreconstructed aloofness and greed?" The answer:
To reach out to
complainers not with live human beings, but bots.
No lie. Perhaps there were no live human beings available to resolve problems because they were busy earning cash bonuses by foreclosing on
mortgages that were actually eligible for modification. Why divert precious human capital to greasing squeaky Twitter wheels when you can boost profits putting people out of their homes? The problem,
however, is that bots -- like the company they work for -- are tone deaf.
Although sentiment analysis algorithms are improving, we are still a long way from a truly semantic Web that can
actually interpret meaning. -- and the BofA Twitter crawler seems particularly obtuse. It sent out robotic offers of help not to customers who were griping about a faulty ATM or a loan-app denial, but
rather about Bank of America’s greedy contempt for the 99%. That is correct: after Tweeting about the bank’s venal conduct, the Occupy Wall Street crowd got robo-solicited by their
nemesis..
PetroniusTA. Yeah, Bo of A, stop stealing ppl’s homes, telling ur employees to lie about it and taking bailout $
Bank of America @PetroniusTA. We are here to
help, listen and learn from our customers and assist with any account related inquiries.
Hahaha.
What makes this all the more comical is how the episode goes right to the hypocrisy
of the bank’s other fatuous attempt at image repair. Namely: advertising. With much fanfare and a whole lot of transparently dishonest protests of newfound humility, the bank last spring
launched its new slogan:
“Life’s better when we’re connected.”
Hahahahahahaha. Life is better when we’re connected to other people. When we are
connected to mere automatons, life -- and Bank of America’s prospects for redemption -- is significantly worse.