Engaging Customers Beyond Email
By Michael Greenberg | COO
Ever since the WSJ article on the end of email, its been a cage match between email service providers and social media/emerging technology. Hyperbole aside, this is just part of the natural evolution of technology. Ideas that were cutting edge become mainstream and eventually become background noise.
What makes this time so different from years past is the sheer number of channels for interaction. Its tempting to try and take on all of them, but unless you have a large team or superhuman skills, you won’t be able to put enough time and energy into each channel to get a good return.
So the key here is to pick your battles, find the channels that make sense, and put in the resources to make them work. We love what Express is doing on Twitter – focus, cadence, good content, personality, and fits naturally with the rest of their marketing and brand voice. We also love what Pink does on Facebook – it also has focus, cadence, good content, personality, relevance, and stays exactly on brand.
Brands can learn a lot from these examples. Success in the new (mostly) social channels comes from resourcing and focus more than anything else. Just check out Chris Brogan, who has become the foremost social marketing guru through sheer force of will…51,000+ tweets, over 100K followers. And he seems to have conversations with every single one.
October 16th, 2009 at 8:06 pm
I’m not certain I fully agree that a company can afford to pick and choose the channels they use, but I guess if your marketing department is only a few people, it would make sense.