I read a post not too long ago about how Seth Godin’s book, “Permission Marketing” had turned 10 years old recently. Not to come off like a soothsayer, but I recall when I first read that book, it completely made sense to me–it was just so natural, so commonsense.
What my 20-something naive head failed to realize at the time was how unnatural and foreign these concepts were to other marketers. The book was eye-opening to say the least.
Our last post talked about how Facebook Fan Pages could very well eclipse brand landing pages and microsites as the leading method way to drive people to an online “home” for brands. That post, and being reminded of Godin’s landmark book got me thinking about how Fan Pages also fit in so well with opt-in marketing–that permission to be marketed to–to be part of the conversation.
For example, I presently have 1,668 emails sitting in a “to be read” folder in Outlook. These are all email newsletters I’m interested in. I genuinely want to read them, but of course, I rarely find the time. Contrary, I do read my favorite blogs via an RSS reader (mostly now lying in bed with my iPhone). However, if I become a fan of a brand on Facebook, I fully expect the occasional post to show up in my News Feed. In fact, I want it to because I’m that invested in that brand. For example, I love the show “Pitchmen” on Discovery. I became a fan of their page and occasionally Billy Mays (or someone pretending to be him) will shoot out a clip, or when the next episode is going to air.
The posts are short, I can breeze right past em, or click through if I want. And I actually perk up a little when I see a new one. When’s the last time a marketing message did that? Conversely, I would NEVER read an email newsletter sent from the show…Billy, I love ya, but stay out of my inbox.
And yes, I realize this all takes a page from Twitter, but having the posts integrated with the Fan Pages keeps the conversation and the interaction all in one place. I can see it all during my 10 minutes a day of “Facebook time.”
Facebook even announced the ability for people to Become a Fan of your page right from ads you run on the site.
It’s unlikely Mr. Godin could have predicted all the wonderful places permission marketing would go…but we’ll always thank him for getting us started, and continuing to be a thought-leader in the field. Viva La Godin. Viva La Facebook.
Several economic bubbles ago (or economic downturns, for the glass-half-empty set) there was a huge “no-frills” movement in grocery stores. It featured products called “generics” that were often packaged in plain yellow cans with black lettering or white cans with blue lettering for staples like beer, soda, detergent, rice, etc. The biggest differentiator for all of these products was, of course, price. Packaging was stripped down and stark. There was no expectation that the products inside were any better than the comparable branded goods. They were just cheaper, often a lot cheaper.