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Email marketing vs RSS marketing

Tuesday, November 7th, 2006 at 10:58 pm

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After a good week or so completely offline I’m now back to find more than 800 emails in my inbox, and that’s after the junk filter has done its best. I also have more than 1,500 unread entries in my RSS reader.

And which one am I looking forward to tackling first of all? Easy. Even though I’ve got more entries in my RSS reader I’ll be looking there first.

And why? Because I’ve actively subscribed to every feed that I receive. Granted I probably won’t get through all 1,500 odd posts, but I can say with confidence they’ll all be of some interest to me because I asked for them.
In contrast I’m dreading having to open my email inbox. I’m sure buried in there will be some emails that are actually intended for me, but I can be equally sure that there will be a fair number of actual spam emails and marketing emails that may as well be spam.

As a marketer I tend to opt-in for email marketing from most companies I deal with. I’m interested in seeing what a wide range of companies are doing with their marketing, but it does place quite a load on my email inbox.

Seeing a week’s worth of emails in my inbox and posts in my RSS reader has shown me two things:

1) Email marketing can’t have a sustainable future once RSS becomes mainstream (and with IE7 out that’s not going to be far off).

The real user control over subscriptions means that RSS will become channel of choice for digital communications - email will be reduced to a secondary supporting marketing channel.

The lesson for businesses is that having a website and an email marketing programme isn’t enough. Content and messages need to be available by RSS feed as well to give users that choice.

2) Tools that help manage, sort and prioritise RSS feed content will become ever more useful.

The ever-increasing torrent of information that we receive by RSS will mean that there’s a real consumer need to sort and prioritise content. Tools that can do this in an intuitive and user-focused way will make users’ lives easier.

Marketers need to be conscious of this as these kind of tools will also enable consumers to sort overtly commercial messages from other types of content.

As marketers we’ll need to ensure that our messages have enough content value to be worth reading and engaging with, rather than just being sales pitches.

The other challenge will be how marketers can personalise their marketing through RSS, although I haven’t really worked out how that could be done yet. Any ideas gratefully received…

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Comments on “Email marketing vs RSS marketing”

  • Email Marketing « Julialouie’s Weblog - Online Marketing

    [...] Users can subscribe to RSS feeds and receive automatic updates right to their Blackberry. Although Simon Wakeman argues that RSS feed won’t replace email marketing until it goes mainstream. In the upcoming [...]

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Links to interesting information I've spotted recently on the web:

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  2. Social reporting at Cisco08 Public Sector Summit
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  4. Butt Out IT! Facebook “Productivity Loss” Is No Concern of Yours - Brian Prentice — A member of the Gartner Blog Network
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  11. The World Does Not Need Journalists
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  13. Creating an internal Social Media Forum
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My most recent bookmarks from del.icio.us:

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  3. If RSS Is Niche Media, Why Use It?
  4. New Media Knowledge - Rough Guide to: Social Media and the Law
  5. UK Kids and Teens Communicate Nonstop
  6. Understanding and Aligning the Value of Social Media | FutureNow's GrokDotCom / Marketing Optimization Blog
  7. weaverluke: Twitter.com
  8. The week that Britain's culture wars broke out | Media | The Observer
  9. Message in-a-Box
  10. Welcome to Where I Live | Where I Live
  11. Utilising Web 2.0 in local government
  12. MySpace and Facebook Fast Becoming the Leading Mobile Social Networks
  13. searching for the impact of empowerment report - MORI
  14. Demos | Publications | State of Trust
  15. Pew Internet: Teens, Video Games and Civics

Simon Wakeman

I've been on the web since 2001 and have been blogging about marketing and public relations since January 2006.

I'm currently Head of Marketing at Medway Council as well as a freelance marketing and PR consultant.

The content and opinions expressed on this website are not endorsed by nor reflect the views of any company or organisation I work with.

Simon’s passion and enthusiasm for all things digital is infectious. He has a great ability to keep his focus on clients’ big strategic issues, while keeping calm and motivating the team around him. It’s always a pleasure to work with him. Rishi Dastidar

Fantastic talk by Simon Wakeman on the use of social media in UK local authories. Tom Murphy, Head of Public Relations & CSR at Microsoft Ireland

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