Posts Tagged ‘customer stories’

Customers are talking: more Blackberry Storm stories

Sunday, May 17th, 2009

A few months ago, I gathered tweets and evaluated them to see what people thought of the Storm, the iPhone imitation from Blackberry. David Pogue of the New York Times had panned the device in his review, yet I found that the stories told on Twitter weren’t so bad.

Then today I found this entry on the Crackberry blog (via FierceWireless), a Blackberry users’ site unaffiliated with the company. The entry posted (then took down) preview pictures of the planned Storm II.

What’s left, even though the pictures are gone, are the comments. And in this set of comments, you’ll get a very interesting, 360 degree picture of what Storm users (and Blackberry fans) think of the device.

Some examples:

looks like the same crappy device that the first storm was in my opinion.. i am neither impressed

They need to offer those of us who put up with this laggy sub-optimal device so that their 4th QTR 08 and 1st QTR 09 numbers could get a boost a DEEP trade in discount.

I’m on my 4th storm because my screen keeps sticking

I like the clickable screen on places like the browser where you have to select something on the screen like a link. Not so much for typing. Say, what you will, it may be slower and the browser may not be as pretty, but browsing is a heck of a lot easier on the Storm than the Iphone because of it.

What?!? When I’m on break at work, I actually use my friend’s iPhone because it’s 10 times faster than my Storm.

(You can even treat yourself, partway down in the comments, to an impromptu discussion of the latest episode of “Lost”–part of the beauty of the open forum!)

Related posts:
The Blackberry Storm/Twitter project
“Lost” as a metaphor for the dysfunctional company

Customers are talking: the Blackberry Storm/Twitter project

Monday, January 26th, 2009

Like a lot of people, I’ve been trying to get a handle on what Twitter means for businesses. My professional interest is in finding unsolicited customer stories and making sense of them–wherever they are. In this, Twitter has a lot of promise. It’s easy to use, brief and spontaneous. So are customers using this forum to talk about products? I decided to find out.

My test case was the Blackberry Storm. It received an absolutely terrible review from David Pogue, the New York Times’ consumer-electronics columnist. It also had very good early sales numbers–500,000 units the first month of its release, according to the Wall Street Journal. The combination of these made it an irresistible subject to study: would the Twittersphere be flooded with posts from enraged buyers?

The project was made more interesting today, when the Wall Street Journal published an article entitled, “Bumpy Start for Blackberry Storm,” which referred to complaints of early Storm users (but not Pogue’s review), including this vibrant quote: “I found myself wanting to throw it in the ocean due to my frustration with its overall usability.” The article also referred to a release of firmware soon after launch intended to address some of the early complaints, particularly response time.

I used Twitter Search to look for messages containing “Blackberry Storm” and a happy or sad emoticon (there’s a button on the advanced search page that enables you to restrict searches this way). I looked at 88 English-language tweets going back to December 27. Here’s what I found:

The biggest surprise to me was: where were the complaints from users? While half the Tweets were from Storm users, as opposed to people commenting on the Storm, or thinking about it, only 4 out of 44 (9%) of the users’ tweets were negative, while 23 (52%) were positive.

(If you want to check out the searches I created for this project, they are here: happy search, sad search. Twitter Search has been acting funny the past few days–I’m only able to get one page of recent results, and can’t search farther back. I used an RSS feed of the search over a period of weeks to gather the entire list of 88,)

From a customers are talking perspective, this isn’t a terrible outcome at all for the Storm. Whether the firmware change made that much difference, or the Blackberry brand loyalists are immune to hardware glitches, or simply that devices like this aren’t perfect and users expect that–they are not saying this is a terrible device. Many are saying that they like it. If I’m Blackberry and Verizon, I’m not discouraged by the Storm’s initial reception.

By the way, the WSJ has already started to backtrack. On the web site, the article is now entitled, “Blackberry Storm Is Off To A Bit of a Bumpy Start.”

(Disclosure, I am a Verizon customer and a Blackberry 8830 user. If you think I am a shill for Verizon, please don’t make up your mind until you read this post, or this one.)