Click to Play

Vint Cerf on Evolution of the Internet
Vint Cerf is the man widely known as being the father of the Internet, although he humbly says, "a father might be okay." The work that he and Robert Kahn began...

Recent Articles

Selecting An SEO Provider
Show of hands, how many of you have read through Google's Webmaster Guidelines. Mmmm, ok. go ahead and put your hands down. Every now and then I find it useful to look and see what Google has to say to...

How To Remedy What Is Killing Your Rank
There are numerous things you can to manipulate your site to help it perform better in the search results. There are literally hundreds of different factors that are analyzed, many of which you, as the site owner...

Pubcon: Real World Risks To Link Building
PubCon 2007's linking session session was one of the highlights of the event and this session promised to be follow up to the same. The session showcased a critical look at all the different linking strategies and included various topics, such as outbound link optimization...

Analyzing And Eliminating Keywords
This is part 10 of a 12 part series on keyword research. This series will guide you through four distinct phase of the keyword research process, providing you step by step guidelines to help you gather, sort and organize...

What Is The Point Of Free Software?
I am quite frankly baffled why a huge company like Google would pay a bunch of programmers to develop yet another web browser, when we have Internet Explorer for Windows from Microsoft, Safari for Mac OS...


02.20.09

Increasing Your Knowledge Of Social Media

By Jim Tobin

A couple of weeks, ago, Geoff Livingston wrote a post called "What Will You Do When Social Media Isn't Special Anymore?" While I agree with part of his premise (that social media won't remain the shiny new object forever), the other part (that traditional agencies will soak up the social media work) is simply wrong. Here's why:

Historically, specialists stick around

Geoff argues that once the PR, advertising and interactive agencies figure this all out, they'll take the work back. This should be true, but it never is.

1996: "Once advertising agencies figure out HTML, they'll do all the web development. These interactive agencies will be absorbed." Should've been true. Wasn't.

2000: "Once the interactive agencies figure out the tricks of SEO, specialists in search engine optimization will go away." Again, didn't happen.

Today: "Once the PR people, or the ad people, or the digital people, or maybe the SEO people, figure out this social stuff..."  Not going to happen.

In fact, it never happens.

Big brands that are already utilizing social media agencies include Ford, Microsoft, Intel, SAP, Citibank, Coke.  The list goes on. These folks have access to all types of large, talented agencies, but they see a need for specialists-for some of what they do.

Divergence is the most powerful force in the universe

In their outstanding 2004 book, "The Origin of Brands," Ries and Ries demonstrate how the world gets infinitely more complicated and products, and specialties continue to branch out. The telephone splits into landlines and cell phones. Landlines split into traditional and VOIP. Cell phones split into texting phones, smart phones, flip phones.

And on and on.

Join the Mosso Hosting Cloud.
Easy. Powerful. Scalable. Learn More

What's really next for social media agencies

Certainly it's early for all of us, but more likely than being threatened from "above" by traditional agencies, the history of divergence tells us that over time we'll be threatened from "below".  Specialists in one subset of social media will emerge (they already are), and we'll find ourselves competing with them in a couple years.

That's how it works in advertising. That's how it works in PR. That's how it works in interactive. That's how it works in SEO. Because that's how it works.

Will traditional agencies "do" social media?

Of course they will. Just like ad agencies build websites. And interactive firms build SEO into what they do.

And some clients will prefer that model. The "Can you just handle all this for me?" model. Nothing wrong with that at all.

Just don't expect the genie to go back in the bottle, with social media agencies disappearing. History just isn't on the side of that argument.

Comments


About the Author:
Jim Tobin is president of Ignite Social Media, one of the nation's first dedicated social media agencies. With years of experience of marketing and public relations, Jim formed Ignite out of the need for businesses to better communicate with their customers through social media.

Visit Ignite Social Media
About WebProNewsIT
WebProNewsIT is a collection of articles, news and commentary designed to keep DBA's informed about the latest trends impacting their profession.





WebProNewsIT is brought to you by:

SecurityConfig.com NetworkingFiles.com
NetworkNewz.com WebProASP.com
WebProNewsIT.com SQLProNews.com
ITcertificationNews.com SysAdminNews.com
LinuxProNews.com WirelessProNews.com
CProgrammingTrends.com DevWebPro.com






-- WebProNewsIT is an iEntry, Inc. publication --
iEntry, Inc. 2549 Richmond Rd. Lexington KY, 40509
© 2009 iEntry, Inc.  All Rights Reserved  Privacy Policy  Legal

archives | advertising info | news headlines | free newsletters | comments/feedback | submit article


Database Forum WebProNewsITazil News Archives About Us Feedback DatabaseProNews.com About Article Archive News Downloads WebProWorld Forums iEntry Advertise Contact