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Freelance Marketer for High Tech with a focus on BI

Social Media

Social Media Share Buttons Cause Link Overload

I recently read an article on Fortune magazine titled, Oversharing: The Business of Share Buttons. The article captured something I’d been thinking about for quite a while: with so many means to share content, is content sharing becoming diluted?

There are two major players in the “share button” space – AddThis and ShareThis. AddThis offers 271 sharing services to its publishers and ShareThis offers 50 sharing services. 271 services? What the heck are all those share buttons at the bottom of blog posts? I recognize maybe a dozen. What is Kaboodle anyway?

The Fortune author calls these sharing services the long tail of sharing. Not the most popular means of sharing but certainly being used by some folks. As you might expect, Facebook and Twitter make up the bulk of the sharing venues. Even so, the sharing service business continues to grow.

Recently, Google has jumped into the mix with Google Buzz. Michael Calore at Webmonkey says, “Buzz is more than a little bit like Twitter — and a whole lot like Facebook and FriendFeed. Anything you post is automatically sent out to the people on your Google Contacts list you interact with the most. All updates are real-time, and anything you share is open for comments. You can also post privately to a select group of friends.”

As a marketer, I’m concerned about “link overload” causing my prospects and customers to tune out. Yes, I want my content to be seen by as many relevant eyes as possible. But the keyword is “relevant.” Not everyone in the world will need to see or even want to see the content I create. I need to make sure the information I share is targeted to the right audience, by sharing content where they’re most likely to see it. Is that with the Mister Wong button? I doubt it.

Related posts:

  1. The Buzz about Social Media Marketing
  2. Networking Your Social Media
  3. The Social Media Marketing Wormhole
  4. Will Social Media Replace Traditional Marketing?
  5. Social Networking Starts the Relationship, Face to Face Clinches It

1 Comment to “Social Media Share Buttons Cause Link Overload”

  1. Terri,
    It’s not just links that are causing an overload. I’ve been invited to join so many LinkedIn-like online networking business groups that I’ve started to treat the emails I get from them like Spam. Some of us have to work for a living and can’t spend hours a day sharing.

    It is, after all, the quality and not the quantity that counts.
    Thanks for this post,
    Susan

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