
- Image by cobalt123 via Flickr
It’s definitely interesting to know what people are saying about me, so that I can “be part of the conversation.” However, if we can agree that importance is a relative term, I would argue that certain people are more important than others relative to me.
In Las Vegas, high rollers get the red carpet treatment. Comped rooms, free meals, tickets to the show, you name it… because they spend a lot of money in the casinos. It’s the same with sporting events, people who pay for Box Seats are treated like royalty, meanwhile the rest of us get hot dogs and peanuts during the game.
When will this mentality switch over to Social Media?
The Importance of Importance
It doesn’t necessarily matter what everybody says about me. It matters what important people say… Up until now, I’ve thought that important people are the social media elite, the influencers if you will, because due to the Power law they’ve become the broadcast networks of the internet. If I’m a business and I have a message, then I need them to help me get it out to everybody in whatever niche audience they’ve carved out for themselves.
But even everybody in that niche doesn’t care about me, making that line of thinking limited in some ways.
The people who have shown that they care about a business, have done so with their money. If I’m a smart business, I’ve been collecting their E-mail addresses so that I can send them a barrage of special, high pressure limited time offers, making them wish that they had never purchased my product.
But what if I married up all of their Twitter usernames with their E-mail addresses? And instead of spamming them or hoping that they all followed me back, what if I segmented them by whatever demographics are important to me: Baby Boomers vs. Gen Yers, East Coast vs. West Coast, etc. and I started saving their feeds for quantitative and qualitative analysis back at the ranch?
If I did that, how much more could I learn about the important people in my life? My customers…



