Archive for April, 2009
I just had a rather shocking phone call.
I accepted a cold call from a possible service provider that eventually requested my email address to send his promotional materials. While I wasn’t looking for his services at this time, I liked what he said and I thought I might have need for his services in the future and so I agreed that he could send me his info. Congratulations, he got to first base.
I did not however want to give out my email, as I have been overwhelmed with too many unwanted solicitations. Instead I requested that he mail me his material so that I could keep it on file. (Yes, some of us do still use paper from time to time, and I find it easier for this sort of thing). His response completely floored me! “Well, if you can’t provide me with your email, then your not the kind of client we want”, he said very abruptly.
What could possibly have been a new client for this vendor, resulted in a dead end and bad feelings about his company. While marketers cannot possibly customize their delivery vehicle for each and every customer, you cannot expect everyone to be open to just one method of communication.
Just as children learn in different ways, people vary in how receptive they are to new ideas from different media sources and marketers need to realize this. Some consumers see a commercial on TV, research it online and then buy in a brick and mortar store. Others will zap all commercials, but will rip ads from magazines that they read while relaxing and then buy online. Still others rely solely on social and digital media.
Each consumer has their own buying process and that same consumer usually doesn’t shop the same way all of the time. Most marketers know how important it is to reach customers repetitively to truly be effective. What is often missed is that within one demographic there are many shopping types. Cross marketing with a variety of media provides opportunities for marketers to reach their audience in a way that is most comfortable for the audience, not the marketer.
By integrating online, print, collateral, experiential and brand marketing, you can reach each consumer in a way that they are most receptive and allows them to respond in a way that is most comfortable for them.
First there were blogs. Then YouTube and Flickr created image-rich platforms where users could create visual journals, display creative works or promote their personal views and then exchange a list of their favorites with other users.
Next Twitter popularized micro-blogging, the social networking site limited to text-based posts or “tweets” not longer than 140 characters. The concept is to answer the simple question “What are you doing now?”, and since Twitter allows only 140 characters, it was a natural fit for texting.
At the same time, mobile-marketing began showing significant results in reaching and connecting with specific market segments.
It only makes sense to put together the best of all of these phenomenons: A “moblog” or Mobile blogging site is a place where the user can publish blog entries to the web, including images, right from a mobile phone. It’s a great idea for those addicted to blogging letting them post even when on the move.
Moblogging is a whole new type of short form blogging, that incorporates the best one-to-one benefits from blogs, the visual richness of Flickr and YouTube, and the social interaction and simplicity of Twitter.