Table of Contents
- 1 Criteria to get access to Social Support in Conversocial
- 2 Engagement policy in Conversocial
- 3 Escalation Guidelines
- 4 How to stop contributing
- 5 Complete Social Support guidelines
If you’ve passed the two weeks incubation period on #fxhelp, you can apply to get access on Conversocial through this form. Conversocial is a 3rd party tool that the SUMO team use to reply to Google Play Store reviews and Twitter conversations. In order to use it, you need to request an account on Conversocial by following the guideline below. Please note that by joining Conversocial, you’re agreeing to their privacy policy.
We may also use your email address to contact you about your participation in the program. As always, our use of your email address will be in accordance with Mozilla's privacy policy.
Once you filled out the form, the SUMO team will then review your request and follow up with the next procedure. You can expect to get a reply in 2 business days.
Criteria to get access to Social Support in Conversocial
- You have at least 2 weeks of experience contributing to Social Support using #fxhelp
- Demonstrate a good sense of support skill and respect to users
- Provide clear instructions and objective responses
- Showing interest in improving your responses and seek feedback from other team members
- Show responsibility for how you speak and how you act on social networks, even if it is your personal account
- You have signed a Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA)
Engagement policy in Conversocial
Currently, we have the following accounts connected to the tool:
@Firefox | Official Firefox brand account |
@FirefoxSupport | Official support account for Firefox |
@firefox_de | Mozilla account for German |
@firefox_fr | Mozilla account for French |
@firefox_es | Mozilla account for Spanish |
General engagement
@Firefox |
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@FirefoxSupport |
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@mozilla_de, @mozilla_fr, and @mozilla_es |
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Responding
In general, here’s how people typically mention Firefox on Twitter: Compliment the product (i.e. “Firefox is the best browser!”) App roundups (i.e. “My favorite desktop apps”) Support request (i.e. “I can’t find my bookmarks after updating”) Feature request (i.e. “I hope there will be improvement in the next update”)
In Social Support program, generally, we recommend contributors to only reply to support-related tweets and feedback or feature requests. Here’s a general policy to respond from Conversocial: respond from the account that was mentioned with the exception of support related tweets coming to @firefox (which then you’ll need to answer from @FirefoxSupport). For more detail information, please take a look at the table below:
Tweet mentions @firefox and is a support request | Respond from @FirefoxSupport |
Tweet mentions @firefox but is feedback or a feature request | Respond from @FirefoxSupport |
Tweet mentions @FirefoxSupport and is a support request | Respond from @FirefoxSupport |
Tweet mentions @FirefoxSupport but is feedback or a feature request | Respond from @FirefoxSupport |
Tweet doesn’t mention @firefox or @FirefoxSupport but is in need of support | Respond from @FirefoxSupport |
Tweet mentions @mozilla_de, @mozilla_fr, or @mozilla_es and is a support request | Respond from @firefox_de, @mozilla_fr, or @mozilla_es depending on which account the user mention |
Tweet mentions @mozilla_de, @mozilla_fr, or @mozilla_es but is feedback or a feature request | Respond from @firefox_de, @mozilla_fr, or @mozilla_es depending on which one they mention |
Queues
Queues are like workspaces on Conversocial. By default, as a contributor you’ll be able to view these queues:
- Mozilla: The general queue and the most important one. You’ll see conversations from this queue by default.
- Mozilla - non-EN: Queue for any conversation other than English.
- Mozilla - Ignore: Queue for anything else that doesn't require answers. You can ignore this queue and focus on the other two.
- Mozilla - Escalate: Queue for any conversation that needs further investigation.
- Default: Queue for anything else that don't fit to any of the other queue (this can only be accessed by a Social Support Wrangler)
Filtering and Prioritization
Once you select your queue, you can also do further filtering and prioritization from the left-side panel. You can select based on tag, type, or channel. In our case, it’s strongly recommended to filter based on tag only unless you want to work on a specific account we have on the tool.
Play Mode
In order to see conversations, you need to click on the Play Mode button. Play Mode is like a working mode. Whenever you’re ready to reply, you click that button, and when you’re done, you need to click the stop button.
During play mode, there are a few options you can select to customize a conversation you’re currently handling.
Reminder
You can set a reminder for yourself. This will come in handy when you need to confirm the information you want to send to the user before actually replying.
Assign conversation
You can assign a conversation to yourself or assign a conversation to the Escalate queue (Mozilla - Escalate) if necessary.
Sentiment tone
You can also select the sentiment of the conversation you’re handling to positive, neutral or negative with the 3 buttons provided.
Tag
Although we try to automate the tag as much as possible, you could also help by putting the right tag based on the conversation. You can select more than one tag for every conversation. For a full guideline on Conversocial tagging, please see this article: Social Support - Tagging guidelines.
Hold
There’s also an option to hold a conversation. This will come in handy if you’re still waiting to hear from the user (Waiting on Customer) or when you need to confirm from somebody else in the community/organization (Waiting Internal).
Closing options
Here’s where it begins to get more interesting in Conversocial. You could also close a conversation based on the background on why you think it can be closed. Here are the options we provided on the tool:
- (*new)Bug Filed: Use this for a conversation that contains a bug report and bug report has been filed for that.
- Could Not Resolve: Use this for a conversation that has been going on for a long time but hasn’t been able to resolve.
- Escalated: Use this for a conversation that has been escalated to “Mozilla - Escalate” queue or forwarded to the other internal account (for example @mozhacks, @FirefoxDevTools, @ServoDev, @torproject). Consider using this for a conversation that has “MDN/WebDev”, “Rust”, “Servo”, “Tor”, or “WASM” tag on it.
- No Need to Reply: Use this for non-help-related conversations. Consider using this for a conversation that has “No Action Taken”, “Community”, “Controversial, “Fan Love”, “MozFest”, “News/Press Release”, “Social Support/AoA”, or “Staff/Employee” tag on it.
- Replied by contributor’ personal acc: Use this if a conversation has been handled by other contributors from their personal account.
- Replied by staff' personal acc: Use this if a conversation has been handled by a staff member from their personal account.
- Resolved: Use this for a help-related conversation that has been solved.
- Unrelated: Use this for a conversation that’s not Firefox-related.
- User didn’t respond: Use this for a conversation that’s stuck on the user. Consider closing the conversation if the user is not replying for at least 3 days after your last reply.
User’s tag
There’s also an option to put a tag/category for a user. We’re currently have 3 tags:
- Expert: Tag for those users who know a lot about our products.
- VIP: Tag for people who have a large sum of followers or a verified account. Consider putting this tag if a conversation has an “Internet celebrity” tag on it.
- Trouble maker: This is a tag for a user who seems to cause more trouble/create noises instead of seeking for help.
Reply field
When you click on the reply field, a few other menus will appear:
Internal Note
You can use this feature to communicate information that is visible to the other users on the tool. You can see the button above the text field, next to the Public Tweet indication.
Insert clipping
Clipping is basically saved replies or common responses. You can use these reply templates for recurring issues. Just make sure to add some personal touch to it so it wouldn't feel like coming from a bot.
Insert emoji
You can also add emoji in your reply. Just make sure not to go overboard!
Add attachment
Use this button to add an attachment to your replies like a screenshot or screencast.
Send a private message button
This can be used to insert a "Send a private message" button in your tweet. However, we don’t recommend using this feature in the meantime since we don’t normally use DM.
Reply options
There are a few options you can use once you’ve typed your reply in the field:
- Reply: Use this if you’re replying to the conversation for the first time.
- Reply + Hold: Use this if you want to wait for the user to reply back or when you need to confirm some information before you actually reply with the resolution options.
- Reply + Close: Use this if you want to close the conversation. Clicking this button will prompt the closing options we mentioned before.
Adding signature
You can set a default signature for your account by following these steps:
- Go to the Account menu on the top right corner of the screen.
- Click on My Signatures menu under the Personal Settings.
- Click the green Save button.
Responding to a verified account or an account with lots of followers
We’ll be applying an “Internet celebrity” tag for tweets that are coming from verified accounts or accounts with lots of followers. Depending on their tweet content, generally we need to prioritize them with caution. If you’re not sure about how to answer, please escalate to the community managers. If you notice a tweet coming from these types of accounts, consider adding the “Internet celebrity” tag to it.
Responding to a controversial tweet
In general, we recommend our community to refrain from any controversial conversation. If you’re confused, please refer to the following guide: When to respond to a controversial tweet as a Firefox Advocate.
Liking
In general we use likes to indicate that we saw and acknowledged the comment. Especially when people compliment our products.
For example: “I cannot like this enough. @firefox You’re a champ!”
We also use likes at the end of a support session.
For example: “Thank you so much for this! I can access my bookmarks again now”
For both cases, we recommend to do the like from the account that was mentioned with no exception.
Retweet
Usually, we don’t do retweet from our side and leave it to the marketing team, especially from the main brand account (@mozilla and @firefox). But, now that we have @FirefoxSupport, we’d like to change that and set up a process for identifying potential retweet opportunities.
Types of tweets we would consider retweeting:
- Huge praise about our products
- Helpful information about product release
- Tips or trick on using our products
Types of accounts we would retweet from:
- Accounts with a large following
- Other organizations or brands that are aligned with our company values
Direct Message
Although we have the capability to support private conversation through Direct Message, we advise contributors to refrain from using it before we have further strategy about how we're going to utilize the feature.
Escalation Guidelines
Sometimes, you may find a question that may need more attention and may take more time to answer. This escalation process is exactly made to solve those types of questions.
When to escalate
- If you notice that there are more than one person asking the same/similar question.
- If a question getting a lot of attention and there is no solution in the Knowledge Base.
- If the question is related to a paid product.
- If you find other circumstances that you think need to be escalated, please PM the CMs.
How to stop contributing
If you wish to stop contributing and want to delete your Conversocial account, please email rkelimutu[at]mozilla[dot]com or one of the administrators with the same email address you use in Conversocial.
Complete Social Support guidelines
If you're super interested in supporting Firefox users on social media (mainly, Twitter), please follow along these guidelines that will help explain how we do things:
- Social Support - Guidelines — an overview of how to get started on Social Support program.
- Social Support - Contributor roles — where you can learn more about various roles in Social Support program.
- Social Support - How to use the tool — a complete guideline on how to use features in Conversocial to reply to tweets from @FirefoxSupport. (You're here!)
- Mobile and Social Support escalation process — guideline on how to escalate a tweet in Conversocial.
- Social Support - Tagging guidelines — guideline on how to use tag in Conversocial.