The o要e thing about the o要line world you can be sure of is change.It seems like every day there is a new technology being added which will make the internet more accessible. As o要line marketers, we strive to keep up with all these trends and incorporate them into our marketing arsenals.
Which is more important the technology or the customer? The o要e thing about the o要line world you can be sure of is change. It seems like every day there is a new technology being added which will make the internet more accessible. As o要line marketers, we strive to keep up with all these trends and incorporate them into our marketing arsenals. Going back to when the internet started, it was a bit of a nerdy place to be, with lots of people communicating in text o要ly. Some savvy individuals saw how this growing community could be exploited and used to advertise their wares, and with all the hyperlinking joining them to other sites they could be easily found. Then the world wide web evolved from the basic internet adding pictures and multimedia and eventually adding videos too, and it became even more useful to marketing. Added in with email which made it possible to reach a large audience at low cost the web became irresistable to businesses. Each step forward brings with it even more opportunities for us o要line entrepreneurs to get our messages seen. But as it marches o要 into new technologies are we all missing the point somewhat? We all need our ads to be seen, but often we seem to be spending more time wrestling with new technology than actually working. Everyone is jumping o要 the blogging bandwagon at the moment and offering xml and rss feeds to get their messages out. Flash video, along with audio, and video streams is also being used extensively, and often unneccessarily to market products. But even more alarming is the reliance some people are placing on this new technology, to the point of abandoning traditional email and websites. Let me relate this recent story which actually happened. I received a newsletter which I read regularly, and like many others the owner was having problems with getting his email newsletter through spam filters. Like many newsletter publishers he had decided to publish his newsletter as a webpage. He started sending out regular emails when the newsletter was available, and including the link to read it. All ok so far. It was shortly afterwards I received an update from this newsletter telling me that it would no longer be available as a web page, but would now be an rss feed o要ly. And telling me if I wanted to carry on reading I should download some software to do so. Whoa, backtrack there. Your subscribers can o要ly read your newsletter if they download some extra software and learn how to use it? I emailed the owner to point out that I thought it was a bad idea. You want your subscribers to stick with you, make it easy for them, the reply I got was that I should join the 21st century, if I wanted to read his newsletter he would tell me how I should do it. No I don't want to read it that bad thanks anyway. So before you go running headlong into the latest technological marvels of the internet, think about what your customers need. Do they have the latest greatest browser to view your latest greatest multimedia masterpiece? Will they need to download some extra software just to view your newsletter? Subscribers are humans too you know, and as humans they are fickle creatures. They will stick with you while the goings good and easy but make them work to stay with your newsletter and you're history as there are plenty more good newsletters they can get free. Flashy animations, and new technology can be impressive, but put your customers first, and use the technology o要ly if it helps them.
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Author: Doug Titchmarsh runs several sites including http://www.cashinonline.info andhttp://www.titchmarsh.com and publishesan e-zine for marketers o要line and offwhich you can get by sending an email todouglastitchmarsh@getresponse.com |