All a-twitter about Google Buzz
The marketing wheel just got a new spoke, but only time will tell how that spoke supports the hub.
We subscribe to the belief that your marketing should look like a hub with many radiating spokes that connect a vast array of outreach intiatives like PR, twitter, facebook, advertising, mobile media, SEM, etc, etc.) In its first few days, Google Buzz has generated plenty of, well, buzz, ranging from game-changer predictions to jaded shrugs, but - at least until it proves otherwise, Buzz needs to be considered as a potentially vital part of marketing regimens.
It won't change the email game immediately, the way Gmail itself did since its 2004 launch. But it could have Gmail-like growth, grabbing market share slowly and surely, giving it a huge base of regular users in three to four years. (Gmail email addresses now likely account for about 10% to 15% of a typical B-to-C list and up to 25% for newer lists.)
Buzz likely has greater adoption potential than other Google initiatives such as Wave, which generated a lot of initial buzz but limited adoption. We think that Wave is actually a beta that showcases / tests a lot of different ideas and, at its core, Buzz is really a repackage and re-imagination of a lot of Wave ideas...
Among Buzz's plusses:
- It leverages existing features, including your Gmail contact list and inbox. Buzz auto-follows your closest contacts to give you an immediate follow list and delivers fresh content alerts to your message inbox.
- Users can toggle links to move between the message and Buzz content lists.
- Buzz connects other Google properties, such as Picasa, Google Reader and YouTube, to the Google profiles of people you follow, and to your Twitter stream if you opt to connect. (No Facebook Connect function yet.)
- Users don't have to learn a new protocol of interaction, because Buzz incorporates familiar features of other social-networking platforms: like/unlike, share via email, comment on other posts and "at" replies.
- It aggressively filters content so that "less-valuable" posts ("me too" or "nite peeps" posts) get collapsed at the bottom of the viewing window, leaving more room for theoretically meatier posts.
- Lastly, one of the more interesting aspects of Buzz is that many of your Gmail contacts are likely "true" friends and relatives, many of whom you may not be connected to in other networks.
Rising to the Challenge of Inboxes Gone Social
Although it's too early in the game to predict how Google Buzz will affect Gmail use, this broader encroachment of social conversations into the email stream is clearly the future, with the following implications for email marketers:
- Email inbox interfaces are getting busier. Besides Gmail, email clients including Xobni and Outlook, and Webmail services such as Yahoo have expanded inbox functionality. Yahoo recently added inline chat, a beefed-up calendar and links to Flickr and PayPal. These functions are designed to integrate with and complement email, but they can also distract the user from reading email.
- The inbox itself will be more crowded. Buzz will send alerts whenever friends post fresh content. If your recipient is an exceptionally busy social networker, these alerts will push your email-marketing messages farther away from the fresh-content sweet spot.
- Work harder to get your sending email address added to recipients' contact lists or address books.
- Brand your "from" and subject lines. This helps your messages stand out from the onslaught of Buzz message alerts.
- One-to-one messaging must replace one-to-many broadcasts. Personalization that reflects preferences and buying history, triggered emails and value-added transactional emails will compete better with Buzz's highly relevant message alerts.
How marketers should respond to the Buzz factor: