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November 06, 2009

Too Much Marketing

By Ryan Turner | 1 Comments | Posted in in Marketing | Permalink

(Cross-posted from Web Social Architecture)

I really like David Armano’s Conversation Starter post from earlier this week with predicted trends in social media for next year. In particular, his first point hits on exactly what I think is going to be the key to success for marketers in social media:

1. Social media begins to look less social
With groups, lists and niche networks becoming more popular, networks could begin to feel more "exclusive." Not everyone can fit on someone's newly created Twitter list and as networks begin to fill with noise, it's likely that user behavior such as "hiding" the hyperactive updaters that appear in your Facebook news feed may become more common. Perhaps it's not actually less social, but it might seem that way as we all come to terms with getting value out of our networks — while filtering out the clutter.

OK, I actually think the header on Armano’s paragraph is, as he hints, actually the opposite of the truth—the way I’d say it is that “social media begins to look less anti-social!”

But the real point Armano is making is spot on. Social channels are too noisy, and as more and more marketers start to proactively reach out to consumers online next year, and as listening technologies are more widely adopted, we’ll see a dramatic increase in, well, spam.

I made a joke on Twitter recently about going to back to grad school. I was, I think, really obviously joking. But in minutes, I had four @replies from universities plugging their Master’s programs. Yikes!

We are fast approaching a time when public online social venues are saturated with listening marketers, responding to every mention of everything related to their brands, products, and services. It’s easy to anticipate Twitter’s @ channel, for example, becoming essentially useless.

Armano is right to predict an increase in user behaviors that enable them to filter the noise. But I also think we’ll see a rise in demand for and sophistication of privacy controls (and even products—like the “social router” I once pitched to Nancy White after her talk here at ZAAZ), as well as an increase in the importance of private networks and communities.

What’s a marketer to do?

Create value, that’s what. Next year will be a year for opt-in marketing—the focus will be on creating content and services people want to use. Heads up, folks, people don’t want you to “engage them” in “conversation.”

1 Comments

I think the tweens of today will come to value and actively seek out, stuff that they're interested in. Nothing that comes *at you* from FB or Twitter will carry an authenticity – these platforms have been co-opted by mass-marketers. I can forsee a not-to-distant future where an 18 yr old will go back to places like indy bookstores to find cool magazines and record stores for their stuff. People are finding out that social networking is shallow; it's hollow. A hundred tweets or FB updates can never beat a single night out with friends. Things you find yourself and share with your peers have more value than virtual objects shoved at you; objects that essentially don't exist. Things you can hold in your hand have more value than things that don't and stand apart in the comparison.
The next Indy/underground/DIY will be all about the real. As one example, I predict local record stores will make a comeback. My advice to marketers would be to use technology towards ends such as this.

Posted by: Kurt Isensee | April 15, 2010 at 05:35 PM

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