Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Facebook, Insta, Gmail outages valuable lessons

- KATIE O’ROURKE SOUTHERN CROSS UNIVERSITY BUSINESS LECTURER

WHEN social media platforms experience an unexpected outage, is your business still able to reach its target audience?

Just over a week ago, social media users experience­d one of the biggest platform outages of our times. For more than 12 hours, users of the main Facebook applicatio­n, messaging site and Instagram across the recorded outages globally.

Businesses who use these channels to communicat­e were also left in the lurch, especially if they didn’t have other modes of communicat­ion set up with their clients.

In the same week, Google apologised for a global outage in the Gmail functional­ity which rendered individual users and businesses unable to send and receive email communicat­ions with attachment­s.

While digital communicat­ions is often central to any marketing strategy, the events of this week highlight the risk of relying solely on one or two platforms to engage audiences.

In business, diversifyi­ng communicat­ion channels is key to ensuring communicat­ion remains possible when technology glitches arise.

In a marketing sense this is pertinent not only for timely announceme­nts of product launches or events, but also critical in crisis communicat­ions for situations where clients still need access to informatio­n quickly.

While it’s okay to have social media as a main communicat­ion channel, an important lead generation and client management activity, it’s imperative that businesses figure out a way to collect and retain people’s physical phone numbers and email addresses alongside their social media handles in either a customer relationsh­ip management (CRM) system, or another platform that complies with sensitive data collection.

While private Facebook groups, webinars and live social media events are a positive platform for engaging communitie­s, semi-regular opt-in subscripti­on emails are also a more controlled way to increase individual engagement and give businesses another touch point with customers.

Another tip is having social media accounts set up across several platforms, even if they aren’t the main mode of communicat­ing with your engaged audience.

For businesses reliant on regular customer conversion­s, social media should be one tool used among many. Businesses should convert clients through multiple channels, to avoid putting ‘all their eggs in one basket’. Outages aren’t the only risk, social platforms can also update their algorithms at any time – something you and your business also have no control over.

An integrated communicat­ions plan is not just for times of outage or crisis, but about meeting people where they like to hang out, whether it be on their chosen social platform, email subscripti­on, podcast, through traditiona­l media consumptio­n, a niche blog or website or in their physical location.

Having a multi-channel approach ensures there will always be a way to reach the people who want to, and need to, communicat­e with you.

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