Is Apple Support’s Departure from X Marking the End of the Omni-Channel Era?

Is Apple Support’s Departure from X Marking the End of the Omni-Channel Era?

Reports claim Apple is about ​to⁣ cease ⁢offering⁣ human tech support via X, the service⁤ formerly known as‍ Twitter, its own ⁣online forum, and YouTube beginning Oct.⁣ 1. Users will still be able to access automated ⁣systems, but those replies ⁣will send you elsewhere to access human support.

Apple support staff who have been providing human assistance ‌via those two channels will ⁤be‍ transitioned​ to phone-based⁢ support roles, ⁣the⁤ reports claim.

Was this‍ an ill-fated love ⁣affair?

On the‍ surface, ‌this is a weird decision given Apple’s ‍visible commitment⁤ to omnichannel customer services.  The company has ⁤offered customer support via X/Twitter since 2016, when ‍most customer-facing entities began‌ doing so. ‌At that time, customer service teams everywhere flocked to the platform to open up direct and immediate communications with customers.

Customers became engaged and these⁢ days around 79% of people posting a query on social media expect ‌a response ​within 24 hours. At least one survey ⁢showed ⁢75% of​ consumers have already used Twitter/X to interact with a ​brand.

The social media ‍service ⁢even had‌ an @TwitterBusiness channel through which ‍it evangelized such use and explained why it had become an essential part of the omnichannel marketing mix.‌ That channel’s‍ Twitter handle no⁤ longer exists, which is unlikely to reassure brands using the service.

Chaos isn’t⁢ good for business

There has been no end to controversy since Elon Musk, the new owner of X, took⁢ over⁢ the company last year.⁢ Decision-making has at times ⁣seemed erratic or unfair, and the commitment to securing‌ the platform and protecting people⁣ from various forms of ⁣online harm appears weak.

These and other changes at the company mean many major enterprises have ‌changed their mind concerning customer engagement‌ via‌ the service. Big names such⁣ as NPR have⁢ stopped​ using the service at all in protest over ⁤decisions made‍ by the service.

Many industry observers​ now question the transparency and‌ trust commitment X ⁤shows, causing them to revaluate customer support through that channel.

‌ No​ fly zone

In May, Air France and KLM stopped handling customer service requests there,⁤ pointing ⁢to recent changes that⁤ meant requests made via the service were no longer accessible via their own internal‌ customer care systems. ⁢ That was probably as a result of the decision⁤ to cut off API access, which broke a multitude of third-party ⁢apps.

While the focus was on apps such as Tweetbot, those⁤ apps ‌also extended to‍ internal enterprise social media tools,⁢ such as customer care. It’s plausible to imagine ‍Apple’s own systems were similarly ⁢affected.

If​ that is the case,‌ it’s clear why Apple is abandoning the platform. ⁢This doesn’t explain⁢ the decision to ‍quit YouTube or its own support forums, but perhaps the demand doesn’t exist once Twitter contacts are removed.

Ultimately, however,​ decisions made by⁣ the big‍ social networks have ⁤seemed controversial in recent ⁤years. From the furor⁤ around misuse‌ of…

2023-09-01 11:48:02
Link from www.computerworld.com rnrn

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