Fervor over digital marketing has enjoyed a recent shot in the arm, thanks to the flourish of social media tools. Facebook and Twitter have put the power of instantaneous updates in the hands of everyone in an organization rather than the select few who administer a company's website. This is a huge transformation, but one that comes with increased risk, depending on the teens you are trying to reach. As more and more companies adopt social media as a platform to perpetuate brands, we can expect to see a cause and effect. The current cause is social media updates -- tweets, status updates and the like -- being pushed out often with no real long-term brand strategy in mind. The ability for "right this second" communication to your brand loyalists is great, but without a considered messaging approach (too many uncontextualized @ reply tweets, little to no value in the communications), and brand followers' level of interest is going to quickly wane. The resulting effect could be similar to what happened with websites back in the early 2000s. As the novelty of the medium wore away, websites with too heavy an emphasis on extraneous fluff (nice long Flash intro anyone?) rather than real substance died off. As the digital landscape becomes more and more saturated with Twitter, Facebook and YouTube channels, there will be a similar survival of the fittest. When the craze dies down, the survivors will be channels with great content and useful benefits to teens. So how do you effectively take advantage of these digital marketing tools to reach teens rather than just jumping into the pool with your clothes on because everyone else at the party is? Honestly evaluate what you have to offer Now is the time to be honest about what attractive content your organization really has to share. Do you have special offers? Valuable information that can't be gotten elsewhere? A good sense of humor (don't underestimate the power of making teens smile)? Focus on the thing you do well and stick to it. It might be tempting to go for quantity over quality, but as in any real-life situation, teens have only so much tolerance for useless interruptions to their lives. Select the right tool(s) When selecting social media tools for your company to use, it's crucial to select the one(s) that will best propel your message. Too often organizations simply pick them all because that seems like the thing to do. However, sending out tweets when there's not much to say isn't going to improve any potential customer's opinion of you. Furthermore, research shows that younger teens tend to eschew Twitter due to privacy concerns. You're best off tailoring your digital marketing selections to the material you have and the audience you're going after rather than forcing communications where they don't belong. Nurture your new efforts An effective social media presence requires a dedicated commitment. Simply posting "when there's time" will net you roughly the same result that you'd get if you gave the real-life teens the scraps of your time. Simply being on Facebook or Twitter isn't enough. Be prepared to devote a significant chunk of time to this if you want it to succeed. Remember, just as in any relationship, you tend to get back what you put in.