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Twitter vs. E-mail: Which one really gets more leads?

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Services for Real Estate Pros with Wilmington Design Company

Twitter VS E mailTwitter vs. E-mail: Which one gets more leads? Want to reach new homebuyers? (No need to answer that.) Before you get sucked into the Social Marketing vortex (which is where every company seems to be heading), consider the following facts:

* Although Twitter had 18.2 million unique visitors in May 2009, 5% of Twitter users account for 75% of all activity, and 85.3% of all Twitter users post less than one update per day. (Sources: blog.nielsen.com; www.sysomos.com)

* 90% of Internet users between the ages of 18 and 72 use e-mail daily. (Feb. 2009 Pew Internet and American life project)

* 87% of consumers' online time is spent reading their e-mails. (David Daniels, Vice President JupiterResearch, Dec. 2007).

* 60% admit to checking their personal e-mail at work an average of three times a day. (AOL, 2007)

Twitter has recently become the talk-of-the-town for many marketing agencies, when it really doesn't justify more than a casual mention in social media strategy. Yet it is the basis of many marketers' social media conversation. The reality is: Twitter is not the right tool if you're expecting to get many leads (or ultimately, sales). Twitter's usage numbers are not putting a dent in e-mail outreach. Remember, 90% of Internet users spend 87% of their time online reading e-mail!

The interesting phenomenon is that many companies are jumping through hoops to respond to tweets, yet they are comfortable using auto-responders for their e-mails, such as: "we will get back to you in 48 hours," or not even responding at all. Responding to an e-mail should be your first social media strategy. Use Twitter with a "brand-awareness" approach, and think of e-mail like a telephone -- your customers are waiting on the other line.

There are opportunities to have real interactions with your customers, and they're sitting right in your inbox. What strategy do you have in place to react to responses to your e-mail campaigns? Having real conversations with your customers through e-mail is the best way to ensure a lasting relationship. And maybe your customers will even tweet about your e-mail savvy-ness. You can read about our email outreach program here, and find out how we can help convert prospects into customers with email marketing.

Posted by Bill Hunter President/Creative Director

Wilmington Design Company

Comments(7)

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Nicholas Goraczkowski
Aurora, CO
Your Mortgage Resource - (720) 83-RATES

Good statistics. I find that it's best to try to do various avenues of marketing. Not just stick to one.

Jul 29, 2009 04:27 AM
Roger Johnson
Hickory, NC

Bill, very informative post.  I've suspected as much from Twitter.  I wonder how Facebook compares?

I think you're right.  Email is still far more effective, because it's far more personable.

And you're dead-on about businesses and Twitter.  I made a negative comment about a local business on twitter and had a tweeted response in less than a minute.  Yet, I've been on the phone (and on hold forever) at least 4 times (talking more to a computer than a person) in 2 weeks, sent several unanswered emails and waited for 2 days on repair service.

Jul 29, 2009 04:29 AM
Bill Hunter
Wilmington Design Company - Wilmington, NC
Home Builder/New Home Marketing Experts

Right - I agree. We definitely encourage our clients to maintain a variety of marketing efforts. It just seems that Twitter is getting ALOT of attention and time at the moment. We just thought that we would point out interesting statistics that support balancing your marketing time. Twitter is an effective tool for some - as long as you understand that it's one of many tools.

Thank you for your comments.

Bill Hunter

Wilmington Design Company

Jul 29, 2009 04:39 AM
Brian Brumpton
Keller Williams Boise - Boise, ID
Boise Idaho Real Estate

Bill,

Very intersting stats.  I think there are effective ways to use Twitter but I agree with you if I were going to lose some of my web tools my email would be the last I would want to see go.

Jul 29, 2009 04:53 AM
Kathleen Daniels, Probate & Trust Real Estate Svcs.
KD Realty - 408.972.1822 - San Jose, CA
Probate Real Estate Services

Bill, Twitter has become a spam-o-rama-ground for internet marketers. I would tend to respond to email before I would Twitter.

Jul 29, 2009 04:59 AM
Bill Hunter
Wilmington Design Company - Wilmington, NC
Home Builder/New Home Marketing Experts

I know we are going against the popular flow (and we are definitely NOT anti-Twitter) - but we have always gotten good conversions from email campaigns. We have a monthly email that we send out to Realtors in our area called the Realty Observer (you can see July's email here). We get emails and calls every time we send it out.

 

Jul 29, 2009 05:00 AM
Dan Quinn
The Eric Steart Group of Long & Foster Real Estate - Silver Spring, MD
Dan Quinn

I'm not a twit or a tweet or whatever they call it.  I am watching though, because email was never going to be big according to many people back in the early ninties.  Facebook was going to be a joke, and text messaging was going to be a waste of time.  So let's see where it goes...

Jul 29, 2009 05:05 AM