The next time you complain about a company on Twitter, Get Satisfaction may be listening

While it wasn’t made very clear during its outages over the past several months, Twitter has been using the online customer service site, Get Satisfaction to respond to customer complaints. Now, the two are going to work hand in hand with one another to handle customer inquiries about other companies.

Technically, Get Satisfaction is teaming up with Summize, a great Twitter message search and tracking utility, to launch its new “Overheard” feature. (We previously pointed out how useful Summize was during the recent Chinese earthquake news that spread through Twitter.)

For companies that choose to use Overheard, the service will scour the public Twitter stream using Summize to find when that company’s name is mentioned. These tweets (Twitter messages) will then be piped into the Get Satisfaction support network. Here they can be used just as if the question were asked or the comment made on the site itself. Others can respond to these messages, and Overheard will alert the user on Twitter that their question is being answered on Get Satisfaction.

Initial Overhead partners include Comcast, O’Reilly, Seesmic and MyBlogLog.

Get Satisfaction also has a service called “Help Center” which can be placed directly on customer’s own sites. This allows for a more fully branded version of the service Get Satisfaction offers.

Utilizing Twitter seems like a good idea for next generation customer service. Comcast has already received some good press when it saw Mike Arrington of TechCrunch’s tweet about his displeasure with his service and worked with him to fix it. Unfortunately, most companies would have absolutely no idea how to do this — if they even knew what Twitter was at all. The more straightforward customer service angle that Get Satisfaction is taking with Overheard should help companies better understand such power.

Get Satisfaction raised $1.2 million in seed funding last September.

[Disclosure: Get Satisfaction was developed by a team led by Thor Muller, who is an advisor to VentureBeat.]

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About the Author, MG Siegler

MG Siegler writes about technology trends and new media for VentureBeat, with a focus on mobile topics, social elements and key news stories. Before that, MG wrote about technology on his blog, ParisLemon. Originally from Ohio, MG attended the University of Michigan where he studied film. He's previously lived in Los Angeles where he worked in Hollywood and in San Diego where he did web development. He now lives in San Francisco.

  • Stephan
    Yahoo is asking me for my phone number to access my e-mail. Why? Next I have received e-mail from Nigeria I have $ 2,000, 000 from UN. Why does yahoo need my phone number to access my e-mail.
  • joenotdeplumber
    ATT. and the other big guy charge $$$$$ for service, and when you need support you are talking with someone in Philppine. Why do we pay $ to have services in some other country. Where are my 8 billion tax money?