Recently I came across an article on the Forbes (http://www.forbes.com/sites/dorieclark/2015/02/03/why-most-digital-marketing-fails-and-how-to-fix-it/)
that illustrates why most digital marketing fails.
If you’re looking for insights about the future of
digital communications, it pays to ask someone who’s been there from the
beginning. Social media strategist Sally Falkow has been a keen observer of online
trends since the mid 1990s, and started her blog, The Proactive Report,
in 2003. In 2014, she was named one of Cision’sTop
50 Social Media Influencers on Twitter. In a recent interview, she
revealed four issues she sees with the current digital media landscape – and
how smart companies can take advantage of the opportunity that presents.
Not Enough Companies Are Blogging. After more than a decade on the
scene, you’d think that blogging would have become ubiquitous by now. Not so much.
Falkow notes that a UMass-Dartmouth
study showed that in
2008, 16% of the Fortune 500 had public-facing blogs. By 2014, that number had
only climbed to 31%. She understands why companies aren’t jumping onboard.
“Blogging is a commitment,” she says. “Once you start, you have to continue. A
blog has a voracious appetite. You have to produce good content regularly, and
that takes resources.” But she views this silence as a missed opportunity to
communicate directly with stakeholders, share ideas, and stake out a position
of thought leadership. Indeed, she says, “With digital, we have new tools. It’s
easy to publish and you can use analytics to find out what content is
resonating with your readers.” If your company makes the effort, you can speak
to your customers in a very targeted and effective way.
Companies Still Don’t Understand ‘Social.’ We’ve heard it a million times:
social media is like a cocktail party. Don’t be a jerk and talk about yourself
all the time. Don’t try to make a sale before you get to know someone. And yet,
Falkow still sees marketers doing this all the time. One particular pet peeve:
the common practice of retweeting others’ praise of you. “If someone came up to
you [with a compliment], you wouldn’t pull out a megaphone and yell to everyone
else in the room, ‘Sally just said she likes my work!’”
Most Digital Communications Aren’t Visual Enough. The rise of platforms like
Instagram and Pinterest has shown the hunger for visual communication online.
Yet most marketers don’t take full advantage of the possibilities, says Falkow.
That’s partly a function of their training. “Most PR folk are not designers and
have not had graphics training,” she says. But that’s becoming a major
handicap. “Every PR student should take a course in graphic design. Visual
content is a must for social media success,” she says. There are no excuses
anymore. “With the new digital tools, anyone can be trained to take amazing
photos on their camera, or make a short video in less than an hour. You can use
tools like Canva or Picmonkey to edit photos and make posters with text on them
for Instagram or Pinterest. “
You Have to Mix Paid and Earned Media. Finally, Falkow advises companies
to face facts: we live in Mark Zuckerberg’s world, and he wants to monetize.
The days when companies could rely on organic reach to connect with customers
on Facebook (or many other major social platforms) is long gone. “Distribution
and amplification of your messages will need paid social advertising,” she
says, and “the lines between paid, owned, and earned media will continue to
blur. PR practitioners must master the art of using paid social media to
support their content.”
More than a decade into the social
era, most companies still don’t fully get it. That’s a competitive advantage
for you, if you’re willing to immerse yourself in the unique possibilities
online communication presents.
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