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| Combining e-mail with social media
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Location: Blogs 23rd Street Association |
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| Posted by: Program Director |
4/22/2009 |
Combining e-mail with social media
By Karen J. Bannan
Social marketing via e-mail, in one form or another, has been around
for a while. Beginning about seven years ago, it was called viral
marketing, and recipients were asked to forward e-mails to their
friends and colleagues. However, it has faced challenges in the b-to-b
world.
“The reason is, it really didn’t start a conversation,” said Ryan
Deutsch, senior director-market strategy with StrongMail Systems. “It
was very one-sided.”
E-mail combined with today’s social networking offerings such
as Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter, however, is a whole different story,
he said.
“We’re seeing the idea of sharing to social really taking off.
By clicking a link, people are sharing content in a place where it can
start a dialogue or a series of replies. Businesses are now reaching
and engaging influencers that they never would have touched in the
past.”
Interested in taking your own e-mail marketing program to the
social realm? Here are seven tips from Deutsch to help you get the most
of your efforts. - Use your ESP’s social marketing capabilities. Today, most
major ESPs (such as StrongMail and Silverpop) and e-mail software
providers are making it easy to send your e-mails directly to your
Facebook page, for example.
- Create your own social network. IBM Corp. has nearly 45
community sites that are available from the IBM.com home page. Site
visitors can discuss IBM products and industry topics. These
discussions create good fodder for e-newsletters, and they are also
good seeding grounds for specific articles from new e-mail newsletters,
both of which can create new opt-in sign-ups, Deutsch said. “These go
beyond peer reviews or product rankings because they are spontaneous
and fresh,” he added. “You can take this content and add a section to
your e-newsletter devoted entirely to hot topics within the social
environments you’ve created. We’ve found for our clients that these are
some of the hottest and most clicked-on links in their newsletters.”
- Add opt-in links to all marketing collateral. If, for
example, you post a new video on your Facebook page, make sure that
video contains a link at the end so viewers can opt in. Once it’s
shared across a virtual network you’ll be reaching hundreds if not
thousands of prospective new customers. Give them a way to ask for more
information.
- Use your status to publicize your e-mail newsletter.
Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter all give users the option to publish
information—in effect tease an announcement—as soon or as late as you
want to, said Deutsche. “Once you know what you’re writing, you can
start talking about it on your social networking sites. Publish a
status update the day before you send your newsletter out to remind
people it’s coming, and get them excited about it,” he said. “You can
even send them to the corporate Web site ahead of time so they can sign
up if they aren’t already on your list.”
- Change your layout. If you’re sending people from a social
media site to your Web site or asking them to download a white paper or
view a video, opt-in links must be extremely visible. “You can’t bury
the link at the bottom anymore,” Deutsch said. “If someone cares enough
to check something out, you need to give them a very obvious way to
stay engaged.”
- Use the search functions. You are already (hopefully)
following your company and product names via Google e-mail alerts. You
can do the same on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn to gain market
knowledge and good ammunition for e-mail marketing. “Twitter search,
for example, allows you to follow everything that’s mentioned about
your company,” Deutsch said. Now you’re hearing things you would never
have access to. You can then, for example, take the good and the bad
that’s being said and respond to that in your e-mail marketing. For
example, ‘Here’s a tweet we heard about a complaint, and here’s how
we’re going to fix it’.”
- Be a joiner. You can get more people interested in what
you’re saying by becoming a trusted source. By joining LinkedIn groups,
and responding to questions, and joining Facebook groups and getting
involved in discussions, you set your company up as a resource and an
expert. “It’s almost as if these groups are another complementary
channel to your e-mail marketing,” Deutsch said.
Source: www.btobonline.com
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