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The
Dilemma Of Facebook For Marketeers As Private Individuals
I was
intrigued by an e-mail invitation from an old friend to join her as one of her
“friends” on Facebook, the on-line social networking website.
At the
very least, it was an opportunity to catch up with an old friend so I readily
registered and joined the network. After all, I already enthusiastically
support FastPitch which is a business networking site, one of the fastest
growing business networking communities in the world. Their online network
provides me with a one-stop shop to network and market my marketing & PR
business, make business connections, post & distribute press releases,
market my company (and myself), promote my blog and more.
FastPitch
necessarily contains much personal and business information so that other
entrepreneurs have sufficient information to decide if they want to do business
with me. So I had little reservation about recording lots of details about
myself in Facebook.
However,
the word on the street is that Facebook is preparing to introduce a new
advertising plan that will let marketeers like me customise advertising for its
more than 37 million customers. When you consider the amount of personal
information we Facebook members have put into their pages, the potential for
advertisers is unparalleled.
Here is
the dilemma. I am happy for my business, and some personal, information to be
recorded and being made widely available on FastPitch and welcome being
contacted by business prospects across the globe. As an individual, I am happy
for personal details to be available to my friends across the Facebook network;
after all, since joining my initial friend on Facebook I have enjoyed being
contacted by many old friends and renewed many former acquaintances.
However,
with the Internet becoming a key component of our daily social experience, and
people sharing more and more of their personal information, protecting one’s
privacy has become that much more of a challenge.
The
reality is that those using sites like Facebook and MySpace (rumoured to be
following in Facebook’s footsteps) can now be very easily targeted by
marketeers like me with very specific offerings. Heck, they even know that I
have a 3 year old dog that I brought home from a rescue centre; just think of
the marketing opportunities that creates. But I didn’t join Facebook to be a
commercial target.
I will be
watching this new development very carefully over the coming months. I will be
disappointed if I have to pull the plug on my Facebook but, as someone who
already suffers from huge volumes of spam mail every day, I do not want to be a
further marketing target!
Refer :
John
Hicks is a Marketing and Press & Public Relations Consultant supporting
small to medium sized businesses in the UK. He specialises in the
manufacturing, leisure and retail sectors. His company is Headline Promotions
Press & PR.
Article
Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=John_Hicks
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