I'm all atwitter that the young guys who created Twitter have secured $35 million in venture-capital funding, plus a story in this week's
New York magazine.
Of course, these latest
models of the Masters of the Universe are based in Northern California. And of course, the story must--it must, I tell you--compare the rise of the Twitterers to the dotcom boom and just as inevitably
describe in excruciating detail what these guys wear. Thank God for that. If it weren't for all the digital baby moguls fleecing marketers of billions, the ironic T-shirt and rumpled jeans markets
would collapse in a week. We have enough economic calamity to contend with already.
I'm sure the Twitter trio will have as much success making their creation as useful to advertisers as
Facebook and MySpace and others have done, which is to say none at all. Or maybe, they'll go the Google route and pay lip service to advertising while doing everything they can to kill it.
But
the Twitter Tots will also get their billions eventually. Because despite their heady talk of a new world and all that hogwash, the real and only reason these digital dudes (and the Gateses and the
Jobses before them) suffer the likes of you and your clients is to take you to the cleaners.
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They think you're clueless dinosaurs. You got that part, right?
Of course you do. Then why are
you still screwing around with these infants? The Internet is not an advertising medium.
Sure, social nets have some indirect use as a PR channel. But even PR agencies are finding their rush to
tweet extremely unsatisfying as a business proposition. Having decisively lost the product integration battle to media shops, strategic communications practitioners are even more desperate for new
channel opportunities than you are--and that's saying something.
You might sense a bit of angry frustration in this column. That's because I write about this all the time and just once, I wish I
could report that some smart marketer said "enough of this crap" and pulled its money out of every emerging medium except for digital billboards.
Collectively, media agency executives are scary
smart. Except when it comes to anything digital. Then you all turn into extras on "Hee Haw."
Until we get a new network created on a dirty napkin in a punk club in Pomona by a Goth chick in a
miniskirt and the blonde cheerleader she married before Prop. 8 passed, you have no reason to investigate social media for anything, let alone as a distribution platform.
I can't fix an
engine, but I can drive a car. I appreciate my mechanic, but I don't idolize him, let alone pay him a fortune because he talks in gibberish and knows how to repair a rotor.
Digital technology
is just a tool to get your clients where they need to go. It will not save you. Your future and that of your clients will be determined by how well you reform your metrics and deliver on the promise
of addressability.
Period.
At least until they perfect holography. Or the Goth chick and the cheerleader take their company public.