Overview
A complaint on social media is not a support ticket. It is a public performance. The customer is not just communicating with you — they are communicating to their audience. Every word in your response is read by people who are not your customer, who have no context, and who will form an opinion about your brand in under three seconds.
The failure mode is responding as if it were a private support interaction: asking for order numbers publicly, issuing generic apologies that read as scripted, or going defensive in a way that invites the audience to take sides.
A social media escalation response that works does three things: it acknowledges publicly in a way that satisfies the audience (not just the customer), it moves the conversation to a private channel without making the customer feel dismissed, and it resolves the issue in a way that the customer is willing to confirm publicly.
What you get: - Public first-reply templates by complaint type - Move-to-private transition scripts - Private resolution framework - Public confirmation request (getting the customer to close the loop publicly) - Pile-on prevention language
Built for: social media managers, support leads, and brand teams handling public complaints on Twitter/X, Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, and TikTok.