Apple’s anonymous employees
An employee of Apple Computers has taken Shel Israel up on his offer to join a conversation about Apple’s customer service. The employee, however, has opted to do so anonymously.
The conversation began after Shel (my friend and namesake) posted an item about the diminishing likelihood that he’ll buy a Mac. His decision was prompted partly by Lenovo’s response to a customer service issue. Shel wrote:
I want to do business with companies who will be there for me when their products let me down. I just got a case of someone I trust getting helped by Lenovo and screwed by Apple. That’s all I need to know to decide. BTW, anyone from Apple Computer wishing to join this conversation is free to do so.
The response was an engaging and smart one:
think the broader issue is how we evolve large company support organisations where typically the relationship is managed by a junior member of staff and arbitrated by fixed processes? How do we build two-way conversations and trusted relationships? The organisation that cracks this first will have innovation far more valuable than any product based innovation!
The author, though, called himself “masked,” which is also his blogging moniker—he authors “The Masked Blogger” (which is also where he responded in more detail to Shel’s post). Shel replied by asking why he should trust a company whose employees have to mask their identities, to which masked said he, too, was uncomfortable with anonmity:
Here’s the dilemma:
- don’t participate in the conversation
- participate transparently with a fear that the income to support my family could be at risk
- participate with anonymityIs the bigger question, as you point out, why don’t some employers trust their staff to join and add value to the conversation?
My thoughts have been to “extend the membrane” from the inside with the hope of demonstrating value and effecting a change in approach.
Am I misguided on this ... is transparency and authenticity a prerequisite?
I sense I’m not alone with this dilemma. I will post further on this issue as I think it is important to many of us. What is do you think? I’d be very interested if this issue resonates with any of your constituency.
Credit to mask for his (or her) willingness to participate. And I certainly understand and support the rationale for remaining anonymous. However, you have to wonder how much influence mask can take back to the organization based on the conversation if Apple doesn’t support employees engaging with customers. And mask is also right in his assumption that employees at many other companies that have not figured out (or don’t care) that business has evolved into partnerships with customers and that the marketplace is, as the Cluetrain Manifesto authors observed, a conversation.
Share your thoughts over at Shel’s blog.
10/08/06 | 8 Comments | Apple’s anonymous employees