"SPAM And The Art Of Marketing Maintenance..."
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I detest SPAM, but there's an awful lot of it going around the
Net, as you know. Co-incidentally, there's an awful lot of
another-four-letter-word-that-starts-with-S going around with it
(just so there's no mis-understandings, I'm talking about porn)!
If you don't know what SPAM is, most Netizens would maybe say
"any unsolicited commercial email". Others, more strident, would
say "any email I didn't want", which sort of begs the question,
doesn't it?
Now, it (almost) goes with saying that unsolicited, bulk,
commercial email is - to put it delicately - a pain in the
posterior. We've all been getting a lot of it already through
our regular, bricks-and-mortar mailbox for years, so why should
we have to put up with it over the Net?
Well, the short answer is, of course, we don't! What do you do
now with the SPAM in your real mail-box? So...do likewise with
the electronic variety and leave it at that: problem gone.
Not "solved" of course, just gone - until next time. And, that
gets pretty tedious and annoying, right? Right...
Enter the anti-SPAM legislators.
And, quite properly too. However, granted that there should be,
and must be, some form of penalties applied to repeated
offenders (offline and online), still I think we have to be
careful - to use a fractured phrase - not to crack the egg that
the golden goose laid!
Picture this: You operate a successful bakery and are doing
alright. You don't have a website yet, your profits are good and
you're holding your own against the competition in town. There
you are, busily getting the next batch of muffins into the oven
and this guy walks into your store. Happily, you put down baking
tray, take off your baker's hat, and turn to what you think is
the next customer.
Only, he isn't.
Instead, after politely introducing himself and establishing his
credentials as the new kid on the block from the Better Baking
Soda Company, he then calmly tells you that he can improve your
profits by 25% if you use his fantastic new baking soda.
Are you going to start throwing week-old muffins at him, for
having the audacity to interrupt your work? Or, knowing what
your costs are, vis-a-vis the whole baking process, are you
going to stop and think for a bit - and then start throwing the
muffins, but only maybe? ;-) On the other hand, maybe your
business isn't doing too well, or you want to do better. Instead
of throwing those muffins, maybe you should think about how you
can make them last longer?
That's a very simple scenario, but one that is repeated
thousands of time, every day, in all forms of business. Indeed,
it's how many businesses must operate, being those types that
sell only to other businesses. And, one of the most important
tools of business is marketing, its proper operation and its
effective maintenance.
With apologies to Robert Pirsig, I have slavishly copied the
style of his very famous book - "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle
Maintenance" - into the title of this article. That, of course,
is where any further comparison stops.
I do, however, have a good reason for concocting my title.
I recall that Mr Pirsig's book explored themes for an
improvement in self (in particular) and society (by inference),
and one of those themes was QUALITY. Applied to every aspect of
our existence, the quality of what we do can have a profound
effect, from highly positive to lowly negative. Whatever we say
and do, write and send, can have those effects, obviously.
So, maybe it's not so much the quantity of SPAM that we all get
that is the problem (although, there are limits, right!). Maybe,
we should be concerned more with the quality - in the broadest
sense - of the message? In particular, I'm thinking of messages
that are relevant, appropriate, targeted and - dare I say it -
even helpful!
However, the SPAM we all love to hate - shot-gun style, bulk
commercial email, splattering all through the system - would
obviously rate very low in the quality stakes, for most people
(although, just quietly, I understand there is a secret network
of SPAMmers who simply delight in sending each other into lowly
orbit every day?), but business-to-business email must surely
have its proper place. And, that would include all businesses,
of course, not just Blue Chip and Silicon Valley...
Which, very soon (if not already), will begin to trouble the
strident anti-spammers even more: as more and more people set up
their own online e-businesses all over the world, there may come
a time when there are more businesses online than there are mere
consumers.
Hmmm...now, there's a thought! ;-(o)
You are no doubt aware that many agencies - government and
private - continue to grapple with the SPAM genie, but
ultimately it is, I think, impossible to "get it back in the
bottle".
In that regard, I have read a number of articles - and have even
received an unsolicited email about "permission marketing"! I
have responded to some but, try as I might, none have returned
with an unequivocal, "dyed-in-the-wool",
"shake-it-till-it-breaks" definition for permission marketing. I
suspect it will be a while before I do.
But, I would be eternally grateful to anybody who can supply it!
Somebody once said, "Nothing happens until somebody sells
something." Well...fatuous as that may sound, we are all trying
to "sell" something to somebody. Right?
By all means protect the consumer to a reasonable and effective
degree, with appropriate legislation and penalties. But, it
would be shooting ourselves in the foot (or worse) to burden
e-business with self-destructive restrictions and penalties.