Much Ado About Social Media Marketing
Back in the late 1990’s and early 2000’s, every marketer wanted a website for their company/product/service. The website would be the silver bullet that would kick-start their marketing and open their business up to massive international markets. They built their sites and ignored them. Mission accomplished!
By the mid-1990’s some of them were noticing that their websites were static and useless cost centers - unless they were going to put in the time and effort to get some honest to goodness consumer friendly content onto them on a regular basis. That thinking is now taken for granted.
In the past 3 to 5 years the revelation that if your site can’t be found in the major search engines it could have a massive impact on your business has also come to fore of the average marketers mind. Now when sites are built or rebuilt, the fact that they need to be “search engine optimized” has ALMOST reached the point of being taken for granted. Most developers and agencies have finally realized what a critical piece of the pie SEO is and it is included in projects as a matter of course…for the most part.
Next up was blogging. Every marketer keeping up with the latest buzz words knew they wanted a blog, but they weren’t sure why. Now every news site worth its weight has a blog, and several blog-only “media networks” have sprung up and are experiencing some success with advertisers.
So what’s next? Social media of course! This WebProNews article (thanks TJF) by Matt Bailey encapsulates the current thinking on social media like no other I’ve read to date. Every time the new buzzword comes about, marketers see it as an “easy” way to get traffic, get recognized, etc. Nothing is easy - just new/different. Just as blogging well takes time, effort and work - participating well in online social sites takes time and effort too.
The key here is that in order to benefit from social sites you actually have to PARTICIPATE, and not just attempt to play your TV or radio spot in the social environment. It’s not a broadcast medium (just like the rest of the web). You actually have to take the time to become part of a community and give more to it than you actually take. I’m just not sure marketers will ever truly get this concept. Come to think of it - doesn’t this lack of understanding finally make marketing as a “department” or “function” within a company pretty much obsolete? Is it time for a new “department” or “function” to be the voice of the product/service inside of the corporation? Or is that the point really - the voice of the customer is the only one that matters and the voice of the product/service have just been talking to itself for quite some time now…
Regardless - why, it has been many years since the Cluetrain Manifesto was written, yet most marketers STILL don’t get it?
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