In Focus

The unique benefits of 5 marketing platforms

Publications and social options

Custom magazines and well-designed catalogs
These types of publications are ideal platforms for storytelling and in-depth content, but many companies claim that the cost of production and postage is prohibitively high. With careful and targeted use of mailing lists and offers, however, custom magazines and catalogs can generate new customers and re-engage with past ones. While the number of emails an individual receives has increased greatly over time, the number of printed marketing messages they receive has likely decreased. The electronic mailbox might be bursting at the seams, but the actual mailbox is probably looking a little light. Go against the grain and give the consumer something they can hold in their hands and provide quality content with which they can connect.

Social media
Social media is the ideal strategy for any company looking to form a connection with or make a lasting impression on its audience. A company can and should use social media to build an interactive, engaged, and permission-based relationship with legions of "fans" or "followers." A recent study by marketer researcher Invoke Solutions showed that social media users are avid followers of companies and brands. Sixty-five percent of social media users follow a company or brand on Facebook, and 47 percent had posted a comment on a company Facebook page. Additionally, more than 31 percent of social networkers follow a brand or company's tweets.

Because these consumers have chosen to follow your company online, they have self-selected to be your target audience. You must find your company's correct level of social media presence according to the audience's demographics, expectations, and frequency of social media use. Once that level is established, use the medium (or media) to post relevant company news, special deals, new product releases, employee profiles, contests, new content, or to ask for customer feedback. Customers tend to be more interested in a company when a company shows genuine interest in them.

The shift in communication preferences from one-way emails to permission-based social media relationships means that a change in marketing budget allocations is on the horizon, particularly for those who are not online retailers or in a transactional business. Ben & Jerry's has delved into this developing trend by announcing that it will be cutting back on email marketing in the U.K. and depending on social media instead. The company has found that its interaction with its nearly 1.5 million engaged Facebook fans is a much more effective marketing tactic than sending customers a purely promotional email. The company has used Facebook to create an active dialog with loyal customers, to limit the amount of "spam" email it sends out, and to recruit future brand loyalists (and customers).

 

Comments

Allen Bonde
Allen Bonde September 16, 2010 at 1:10 PM

'Matching the content to the correct media platform is critical to delivering measureable results' - Right On! This is also the case for specific social media channels - Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook... which each have unique styles, rules, demographics, cadence, etc.

George Wells
George Wells September 8, 2010 at 10:33 AM

"The key to a successful email campaign is an actionable offer to an opt-in recipient. Steer clear from "informational" emails that don't have a call-to-action. These self-serving missives do not provide any real value to the customer and give them no reason to click through."

Interesting post and I agree with some of what you say. However: how did I hear about this post?

Email.

If the digest style email that alerted me isn't informational with no call to action then I am not sure what is. It would be interesting to see how many people checked your post out were it not for email marketing.My point is that email still has a lot more to offer than merely targetting with a very specific call to action and it is still a platform that is essential to any online engagement as any other platform. The key is how consistent you are across all platforms.

Ken Bendrik
Ken Bendrik September 8, 2010 at 8:38 AM

Good insights. How important is it to have content optimized and consistent for each platform? Are there any metrics today that reveal what the level of lost opportunity is when the content is not optimized and consistent?

Barbara Ulmi
Barbara Ulmi September 8, 2010 at 8:34 AM

"...not effective for generating new prospects or reactivating lapsed customers." - I disagree,Gordon. I think email marketing is a great tool for acquiring new prospects, such as through a sign up form on your website or blog. Alternatively, add your subscription form to your Facebook page, or share your newsletters socially - post them to Twitter or FB - or share them virally, through your email footer, which in turn you can link to a sign up form. But yes, you're quite right that open rates for an unknown sender are low, therefore it's imperative to use an opt-in process (as recommended by you), to clearly state the sender address and choose the right subject lines. All of this GraphicMail can show you how to do... cost-effectively!