My socks are blown off. My chest hair is curled. There might be some people enjoying ice skating in what’s normally a very hot location. Someone somewhere stepped up to the plate and created a no B.S. apology email that is a thing of beauty and a joy forever! Go Buffer!
(I asked Buffer
if I could feature their emails in a blog post and they said sure—another example
of great customer experience!) Here’s the whole email.
Hi there,
I wanted to get in touch to apologize for the awful
experience we've caused many of you on your weekend. Buffer was hacked around 1
hour ago, and many of you may have experienced spam posts sent from you via
Buffer. I can only understand how angry and disappointed you must be right now.
Not everyone who has signed up for Buffer has been
affected, but you may want to check on your accounts. We're working hard to fix
this problem right now and we're expecting to have everything back to normal
shortly.
We're posting continual updates on the Buffer Facebook page
and the Buffer Twitter page to keep
you in the loop on everything.The best steps for you to take right now and important information for you:
- Remove
any postings from your Facebook page or Twitter page that look like spam
- Keep
an eye on Buffer's Twitter page and Facebook page
- Your
Buffer passwords are not affected
- No
billing or payment information was affected or exposed
- All
Facebook posts sent via Buffer have been temporarily hidden and will
reappear once we've resolved this situation
If you have any questions at all, please respond to this email. Understandably, a lot of people have emailed us, so we might take a short while to get back to everyone, but we will respond to every single email.
- Joel and the Buffer team
From the informal but still
respectful tone to the bullet pointed list for ease of reading, this email just
does so much right. Let’s go through it part by part:
1: A name- Joel.
Putting a name on the customer
service engine of your product or services might not be a perfect move for
every organization, but for Buffer, it works really well. It seems more human,
and much more approachable than ‘Thanks, The Management”.
2: An informal, yet respectful
greeting:
Hi there, I wanted to get in touch to apologize for
the awful experience we've caused many of you on your weekend.
To the point, personal, and
direct. No business fluffery or jargon here. Love it!
3: After a brief recap of what he’s
apologizing for, he uses a sincere, simple empathy statement:
I can only understand how angry and disappointed
you must be right now.
His grammar is a bit wobbly on “I can only
understand” (he’s missing a key word here “I can only BEGIN to understand”) but
I chalk that up to time pressure and just good old human error.
4: Letting the customers know
they are working on it up front, rather than using a vague, cliché-filled fluff
bomb to explain away the poor service:We're working hard to fix this problem right now and we're expecting to have everything back to normal shortly.
5: Probably the best thing about this letter: a concrete list of steps
you can take in bullet point form. God Bless Joel. He thought about the needs
of his audience, rather than the need to cover his fanny.
The best steps for you to take right now and
important information for you:-
Remove any postings from your Facebook page or Twitter page that look like spam
- Keep
an eye on Buffer's Twitter page and Facebook page
- Your
Buffer passwords are not affected
- No
billing or payment information was affected or exposed
- All
Facebook posts sent via Buffer have been temporarily hidden and will
reappear once we've resolved this situation
6: Always a good move: reiterate
your apology and remind people that you are taking steps to resolve it, fix it,
or change it.
I am incredibly sorry this has happened and
affected you and your company. We're working around the clock right now to get
this resolved and we'll continue to post updates on Facebook and Twitter.
7: Offer to answer questions,
with a very nice setting of expectations upfront:
If you have any questions at all, please respond to
this email. Understandably, a lot of people have emailed us, so we might take a
short while to get back to everyone, but we will respond to every single email.
Well done Buffer Team!
There’s also going to be a Part
II to this blog entry, since I received an equally wonderful follow up email.
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