You own nothing in social media

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I’ve been saying this for years, so let’s be crystal clear:

You don’t own a thing in social media.

Not your Facebook Page.
Not your Google+ Page.
Not your Twitter profile.
Not your LinkedIn group.

You don’t own any of it, and your existence in social media is at the whim of the companies who provide those services. They are not public utilities. You can go from digital hero to zero in two clicks of a mouse. Your social media influence score can vanish faster than you can say Delete My Account. Think it can’t happen? Ask anyone who spent real money customizing their MySpace profile how well that worked out for them.

So what can you own?

Your website and blog, as long as you host it and pay for the hosting and domain name. It’s yours as long as your credit card remains functional and you back up your data.

Your mailing list, as long as you back it up.

Your database.

So how do you take back ownership of your database?

Get an email list together. If you need super low cost, look at Amazon SES or MailChimp. If you want something more enterprise, look at a dedicated email service provider or marketing automation system. Then start asking everyone and anyone who is a fan of yours to subscribe to your newsletter. Facebook Page? Put a sponsored post up with a link. Twitter profile? Stick it in your URL and tweet it every so often, and buy some Twitter cards.

Every week or other regular interval, download your group data. Now you’ve got your database, and as long as you continue to provide value to your audience, you’ll continue to grow it.

Whatever you do, own your database. When today’s Facebook becomes tomorrow’s MySpace, you’ll be glad you did.


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Comments

10 responses to “You own nothing in social media”

  1. vartabedian Avatar
    vartabedian

    I own my voice.

  2. It seems Leo's little Buzz hiccup has brought this up again. It is a shame we always for about little things like this.

  3. Chris,
    Good point. Especially in light of all the talk about abandoning websites for Facebook and other social media outposts. Platforms can and will change.

    As my friend Mark Kurtz likes to say, Verbs First, Nouns Second. Focus on the verbs (and I would add people) in marketing and then the nouns.

    Cheers,
    Tim

  4. Good article, and great points, but I do have one question in regard to this passage:

    “Whatever you do, own your database. When today’s Facebook becomes tomorrow’s MySpace, you’ll be glad you did.”

    You’re using Disqus for comments, though. What happens when they go the way of the dodo?

  5. Hasn't it already? Or are you saying that there's something that's going to come along and replicate Facebook, and do it better, and that hasn't happened yet….

  6. Hasn't it already? Or are you saying that there's something that's going to come along and replicate Facebook, and do it better, and that hasn't happened yet….

  7. It is a growing concern that Facebook is using more of our data to lure in the big bucks. Privacy concerns might cause people to abandon Facebook, and in turn, Facebook might abandon us. Not a nice thought.

  8. Happily, Disqus automatically syncs your comments to your blog. If I turn it off right now, all the comments will still be here.

  9. Oh, I didn’t realize that. I’ve checked it out and it’s not possible with my CMS (ExpressionEngine), but it’s great that it works that way with the system you’re using.

  10. Christopher,
    Excellent point! Some have called using others online properties “Digital sharecropping” reflecting the fact that at the end of the day, you own nothing, despite your hard work. Remember Squidoo?
    It’s such an important distinction, and a shame so many don’t see it.
    Thanks,
    Steve

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