By Allison Stadd on July
9, 2013 5:00 PM
In an embarrassing episode picked up by Gizmodo, Bank of America’s customer service
Twitter account @BofA_Help made a downright fool of itself –
demonstrating exactly how not to conduct customer relations on Twitter.
What Gizmodo calls a “hilariously epic mistake”on Bank of America’s part started
off with this tweet from @darthmarkh:
[...]
The tweet referenced the @bankofamerica Twitter
handle, but had nothing to do with anyone’s bank account. Rather, the context
was a protest against Bank of America foreclosures.
Nonetheless, the BofA
Help Twitter account, obviously attuned to a Twitter search for references
of the bank, replied with the following tweet:
Then, when other tweeters chimed in to reply to the original
tweet, @BofA_Help continued
its automated “customer service,” inquiring if it could be of service when
really the topic at hand had nothing to do with balance transfers, deposit
slips, and the like.
Lesson
for the Bank of America social media crew: you need to fine-tune your help
account to filter out tweets like these so you don’t come across as lifeless
and ignorant. The lack of human oversight on the bank’s part here is stunning –
and should be a word to the wise!
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