-
Website
http://www.ChristopherSPenn.com/ -
Original page
http://www.christopherspenn.com/2008/12/16/social-media-marketing-is-not-cheaper/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
larrylawfer
9 comments · 1 points
-
Ari Herzog
18 comments · 23 points
-
Brian Christiansen
5 comments · 2 points
-
Christopher S. Penn
95 comments · 8 points
-
Christina
10 comments · 3 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
Winter Tomato Soup
3 days ago · 1 comment
-
Grandma Penn’s Breakfast Bake
2 weeks ago · 6 comments
-
What World of Warcraft Can Teach You About Project Management
1 week ago · 3 comments
-
Doing More With Less
5 days ago · 1 comment
-
Celebrate your victories
2 weeks ago · 4 comments
-
Winter Tomato Soup
http://blog.brownbook.net/2008/11/27/how-to-cus...
I would nuance what you've said here, however: "Blogging is pure SEO food." Beyond merely being a great way to move up the Google ranks, blogging is a relationship and community builder that, when done right, lets you pull the curtain back and get a better look at the Great Oz (or at the very least, your neighbour's knitting circle). I'd argue blogging helps build bridges and improve understanding, but then I might also start arguing that it is the solution for World Peace and, frankly, it's too early in the morning for me to start defending that point of view. ;)
Cheers
Michelle
Social media can be extremely effective, but it's not cheap, it's a huge time commitment, and their is no guarantee. At least one a week I have to explain to someone that just because you post a video on YouTube it doesn't mean you will get a million views in a day if ever.
I'm finding that a big part of social media campaigns is managing client expectations, and getting clients to commit the resources necessary for a successful campaign.
Sure, adding on Social Media promotion on top of your already budgeted advertising is expensive. But it's also more expensive to keep the ads and let your trained and grooved in employees go...
We are in the middle of a paradigm shift, as traditional marketing values return (honesty, trust, value). Broadcast marketing is all but dead. The cost per lead is continuing to rise for conventional advertising, but is able to be leveraged through social media, since old posts and articles are around on the Internet search results for years (for free), while ads disappear with the last payment. So I'd say it's still more expensive to keep doing things the "old" way rather than shifting to "new" social media - even though it means talking directly to your customers.
I agree 100% that SMM isn't "free" - but there's real value in letting some of those internal discussions out into the open. They may create that initial snowball effect required to make SMM part of the actual business plan.
While many hear may jump up and down and talk about SMM is a required part of business, there are many industries or executives that are slow to recognize it. It's very easy to say "and that's why they'll fail" but the reality is they don't have to and it doesn't have to take a huge business shift to support it.
This post is great for talking about the value of a simple link - the real challenge is getting those unconvinced industries to recognize it.