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Developing trust

10 tips for handling negative app reviews and feedback

By: Robi Ganguly


Comments provide great feedback about your app

Good comments tell you what people like about your app and what you are doing right. They make you feel good about your work and offer encouragement to keep going. At their best, they are both inspiring and validating: giving other potential customers in the app store a reason to buy or download your app.

Negative comments, however, can be disturbing. They make you second guess yourself, and your app, and can really bring you down.

The reality is this: you will get negative reviews and feedback.

Here are 10 suggestions for dealing with the inevitable complaints:

A photo of a note soliciting customer feedback at Bedlam Coffee

Hearing from your unhappy customers is better than losing them forever

View all feedback as an indication of care

It’s important to recognize that a customer who chooses to engage with you is a rare gift, because they care enough to invest time in sharing their opinion. The vast majority of customers come and go without saying a word to you – having enough passion to engage is a sign of someone who cares about your app in some way.

When you view all feedback, regardless of disposition, as a statement of care, embracing the feedback as an opportunity becomes much easier. Look at negative feedback with respect and amazement – how often do you take the time in your daily life to reach out and tell businesses about how they’ve made a mistake? For most people, the answer is, “not often at all, it’d take too much time”. Your app customers are the same way – the ones who take the time to complain are special.

Avoid being defensive

A natural tendency for all of us when we get criticized is to get defensive. When you’re defensive, you stake out a position to defend instead of truly embracing the customer’s point of view. In the world of customer service, this is a disaster – being on the opposite side of an issue with your customer results in antagonistic relationships rather than cooperative and collaborative ones. Observe your own reactions and emotions in order to tamp down any natural defensiveness that arises.

Acknowledge

One of the most powerful ways to deal with negative feelings and feedback is simply to acknowledge the validity of the customer’s feelings in the first place. By first communicating that the person who’s upset is valid in feeling upset, you can diffuse the tension that many people bring to a frustrating situation created by feeling like they need to fight to be heard.

Apologize

In your daily life, have you ever found yourself worked up and ready to argue with someone and then, upon hearing the words, “I’m sorry” felt a massive sense of relief and decompression?

Apologizing goes a LONG way with most people. It reminds them that you’re another human being and that you care about their feelings. When a customer is upset and frustrated, leading off with a sincere apology does wonders for turning a potential argument into a conversation.

Make It Right

Sometimes an apology simply isn’t enough. Taking the time to go the extra mile and take care of your customer in a way that resolves their issue or delivers them unexpected value is usually well worth the cost to you and your company.

For example, if your app has in-app purchases and someone is complaining, offering them free credits might cost you a bit, but it’s a simple and straightforward way to put meaning and commitment behind your words. We see app developers routinely gift virtual currency to frustrated customers, resulting in increases in retention and spend from the unhappy customer over the long run. Taking the stance that you’ll fix problems and make customers feel special pays dividends over the long run as they tell their friends about your approach and generosity.

Hear Them Out

In communication, the most important skill has nothing to do with what you’re saying. The most important skill is listening.

Remembering this fact when a customer brings negative comments your way will ground you in the importance of truly listening and understanding why they’re upset. Let your customers vent and express their feelings and concerns to you.

You might be surprised about what you learn as a result of truly listening and asking questions in order to deepen your understanding. Sometimes problems external to your app (iOS beta releases anyone?) are impacting your customer’s experience. You might find that a problem you’re completely unaware of is impacting the user experience.

Hearing a customer out doesn’t mean that you have to give in and accept their negativity, it means seeking a better understanding of where they’re coming from and how you can be on the same page.

Avoid the Trolls

Sometimes, negative comments simply come from people who enjoy creating a stir when they can remain anonymous. They love the attention they get from causing controversy.

This type of feedback is exceptionally dangerous because it can draw you into an argument that undermines your credibility. It adds no value to your product or community. While ignoring trolls isn’t always an option, if you’re going to engage with an obvious troll, don’t let them draw you into their level of discussion. Be polite, be nice and draw the line on how much time you’ll spend with trolls.

Set the Record Straight

While you certainly don’t want to get into a comment war with an unsatisfied customer, you don’t have to subject your company, your product or yourself to negative comments that are downright false.

If you run across comments that are not accurate, address them while giving the commenter the benefit of the doubt. Assume they didn’t know any better. Take this opportunity to educate them, and the rest of your community.

Once you resolve an issue, you should take the opportunity to let your community know that things are all copasetic as well. A simple follow up comment that reads:

I am glad we had the opportunity to fix this for you, please let us know if there is anything else we can do to make your experience with us a pleasurable one!

will go a long way.

Learn From It

Take what your customers are saying and see how you can incorporate the feedback to create a better product. If it is features they want, work with to evaluate and add them. If the app is buggy, sort out your bugs.

Developing a great app is a journey and every piece of feedback, negative or otherwise, presents you with information that can be used to better your app. Embrace this opportunity to keep your community involved in the process of making something great. Making your customers feel as if they have some ownership in your app is a fantastic way to build your fan base and turn frustrated consumers into evangelists.

Take the conversation private!

Public discourse with customers is often a poor way to handle complaints and problems. It lends itself to more black and white statements, a lack of empathy and speaking for an assumed audience. We highly recommend taking conversations private, which is one of the reasons why our in-app feedback tools are built to create 1:1 conversations with your app customers. Private in-app feedback is an exceptional tool to increasing the level of conversation you have with your frustrated customers.

Have some other tips? Share them!

So that’s it, 10 tips for handling negative app reviews and feedback. If you’ve got other suggestions for how to navigate the world of app development and customer communication, please share in the comments, we’re always listening ourselves!

Customers who talk to you trust you more

By: Robi Ganguly

Do you like to be trusted?

Of course you do – who doesn’t appreciate being trusted?

Do you like being trusted by your customers?

You should.clip_image002

Are you?

If you’re not working at it, probably not Sad smile

As app developers, most of us don’t really have a clear understanding of why people choose some apps and not others. We wonder why Angry Birds blows up while another favorite game of ours languishes in obscurity. We cross our fingers, hoping that someone large and influential will talk about our app and share it, giving us the boost we’ve been waiting for in order to meet with massive mainstream success.

What we’re hoping for, really, is a recommendation by a trusted source: be it Apple, Gruber or one of the great tech publications everyone’s vying for some page space on.

Hope is not a strategy

While we wish that you all could get that kind of recommendation, we take a much more pragmatic approach here at Apptentive. We believe that if trust convinces app customers, then app developers need to work at cultivating trust, daily. Each and every one of us should be thinking about how to become trusted developers, people who hold an almost emotional place in the customer’s mind when they think of our applications and our relationship.

Here then, are 5 simple ways you can work to make customers trust you:

  1. Be nice
    When they have questions, answer them politely, professionally and most of all, nicely. Especially if they’re not being nice
  2. Pay attention
    When they say something, listen. Take it in, think about it, ask questions. Show that you care about what they have to say
  3. Look out for their best interests, not just yours
    We believe that app developers are always serving their best interests by looking out for their customers’ needs. Make sure that you’re putting yourself in your customers’ shoes and make it clear to them that their needs matter
  4. Be honest
    If you disagree with a customer or won’t be able to meet their needs, there is nothing wrong with communicating about it. Remember to be nice, but people who are direct and honest garner trust because their stance is understood.
  5. Follow-up and stay in touch
    When customers raise issues and ask questions, they’re typically hoping to be heard. If you make sure that they are heard and then take the extra step to follow-up and express ongoing interest in them, they’ll be blown away. Aim to exceed their expectations.

Plan for success: earn your customers’ trust

Think about those 5 steps and ask yourself – are they very hard to execute on? For most of us, it’s a matter of focusing on these steps and making them habits when dealing with customers. It’s also often a matter of enabling yourself to become trustworthy, by enabling communication with your customers in your apps.

That’s why we’ve built Apptentive, really. We want you to become trusted developers who hold a special place in your app customers hearts.

If you haven’t already signed up for Apptentive, take us for a spin today, pro plans start at less than $1 a day.

You don’t have to take our word for it though

Some other smart people talking about customer trust: