Monthly Archives: August 2010

Email Still Beats Social Networks

By Chris Crum WEBPRONEWS

A new report from Econsultancy suggests that email still beats social networks when it comes to marketing for e-commerce. The report says that over a third (37%) of consumers don’t use a social networking site, and that those who have become a “fan” or “friend” of a company or brand online are still in the minority.

Is email marketing more effective than social media for you? Let us know.

The report is based on a survey of over 1,400 U.S. consumers, which the firm calls “nationally representative.”

While Facebook may think email is “probably going away,” marketers are still having a great deal of success with it. And just as increased mobile adoption continues to fuel social media use, it’s not exactly hurting email.

The report suggests that the rise of mobile will continue fuel email’s success. It notes that each generation of chipsets moves mobile devices closer to the personal computer. “Advanced behaviors today (accessing the Internet or checking email from a mobile device) will clearly soon be commonplace, at least for people in their working years. Nearly two-thirds of people under 24 have checked email on a mobile device,” Econsultancy says.

“Online product research contributes a far larger percentage of total retail than the 8% directly attributed to e-commerce, while the evolving nature of digital interaction and customer service is changing the fundamental relationship between companies and consumers,” says Econsultancy’s US Research Director, Stefan Tornquist. “The winners will be those who use digital communications most effectively, to influence and enable both online and offline purchases.”

“Although a variety of media are competing for consumer attention, email continues to be the desired channel for many types of commercial communication,” adds Tornquist. “Social networking and its effect on the nature of brand is the hottest topic in digital marketing, and deservedly so. It’s still worthwhile for marketers to remember that social network adoption is far from maturity.”

The entire report can be found here.

Of couse, it’s not really a competition between social media and email. Both should be part of your marketing arsenal, and are effectively used together all the time. For example, another recent study from ExactTarget found that nearly 40% of consumers visit Facebook and Twitter to supplement the news, information or deals they receive via email marketing.

When Pitching a Product, Ask Yourself, ‘What Problem Does It Solve?’

AmyBateStumpf.jpg

It’s been a very hot summer so far, but many PR professionals are already thinking about their winter holiday pitches, specifically the endless amount of holiday gift guides and how they can get their client to be included.

Amy Bates Stumpf, co-founder of New Product Events and Gift List Media, a gift guide pitching media database, says that regardless of the pitch, you need to stay focused on the problem and solution:

Write a compelling headline that states the benefits of the product, not the feature. The beginning paragraph should focus on a problem that the product solves.

Courtesy of PRNEWSER.

Bates Stumpf will talk about everything you need to know about pitching gift guides in our upcoming “20 Tips in 20 Minutes” PR webinar on Tuesday, August 17th. Click here for more information and to sign-up

Understand the Lens Thru Which People View Their World

by Kaila Colbin , Courtesy of Social Media Insider.

I had the good fortune today of having a conversation with the visionary John Marshall Roberts, whose focus is on igniting inspiration and overcoming cynicism. By understanding the lens through which people see the world, Roberts suggests, we can better appreciate each other, communicate with each other, and connect with each other.

To understand those lenses, Roberts has built a psychometric tool, based on the work of the late psychologist Claire W. Graves. The Gravesian framework explores different lenses through which people see the world; Roberts categorizes these lenses by color for reference purposes.

“Copper” thinkers, for example, have an individualistic, success-oriented worldview, one that thrives on the legend of the self-made man and belief in the auto-regulating nature of unfettered free markets.

“Jade” thinkers are humanistic, experiencing, as Roberts puts it, “the source of all life as the benevolent spirit of one’s fellow man.” In contrast to the copper folks, jade thinkers might reject materialism altogether in the name of love or spiritual connection.

And “Gold” thinkers take a systemic approach. These are the people who recognize money is great, but you still have to be able to look at yourself in the mirror — and, conversely, that group hugs are wonderful but that you still have to pay the bills. They’re the folks who embrace the “power of and” described by Collins and Porras in the book “Built to Last.”

For decades, we’ve looked at traditional marketing from a copper framework. The only questions we asked ourselves were how we could better succeed: how we could reach a bigger audience, get more leads, grow more market share, sell more product. The purchase of AdWords is a copper purchase, a straight financial transaction: I puts my money in, I gets my clicks out. We don’t have to bring no relationship into this.

In and of themselves, those things aren’t bad. AdWords isn’t bad! But it is certainly a different framework from the one through which social media operates.

Companies looking for success in social media must start with a different set of questions: “Why would anyone care? How can I better serve this audience? What can I do to make an authentic contribution to this community?” As Eric Qualman said in his Socialnomics video, today’s successful companies “act more like Dale Carnegie and less like David Ogilvy: listening first, selling second.”

Bear in mind, though, that selling is still in there. The jade approach — the one that puts relationships above all else — tends to fall a bit short when it comes to making payroll. It’s the systemic, gold thinkers who can tackle both imperatives simultaneously: How can we contribute to this community in an authentic way while maintaining our company’s financial sustainability?

What’s interesting is that frameworks evolve iteratively. We begin with a framework, which then gets reinforced or inhibited based on the feedback we receive. There have been plenty of companies that have approached social media marketing from a copper worldview. These are the ones taking the exact same commercials and messages, putting them up on Facebook or YouTube, and wondering why nobody’s following them. The responsive ones are learning from this reaction, and evolving their approach to be more inclusive and systemic — to apply more gold thinking.

Is it ironic that, with gold thinking distinguishing successful social media players from Whole Foods to Gary Vaynerchuk, everything we know about Mark Zuckerberg from the media puts him squarely in the copper camp? Different lenses create different types of success in different types of environments. It is up to you to choose your worldview.