I could easily join the gloom and doomers and proclaim the death of
e-mail (which I think I did write about in my June issue.)
The more I think about it e-mail is an entity much like New York.
The place gets overcrowded, goes through crises that threaten its long
term viability and eventually survives, even resurging, at times, with
greater brilliance than it had before. It's a city we can't
afford to let go down tubes. Its denizens won't give up on its
cosmopolitan lifestyle that makes their lives vibrant and culturally
advanced. (Okay, I'm a New Yorker and on the biased side!).
But think about it. The e-mail channel is certainly cluttered,
e-mail boxes are overstuffed, and over-spammed. Yet people don't
want to give up on it. Email is just too great. It's a way of life,
with all the characteristics of a civilization. It streamlines project
management, making it easy to communicate with groups of people in an
instant, it lets you keep tabs on your son in college or in a foreign
country. People even fall in love via e-mail,.
Software providers, users and ISPs are beginning to engage
themselves more heavily in the war against spam while our government
drags its heels. Powerful technologies are coming into the foreground
that enable both senders and receivers to gain control over spam. Yahoo,
MSN and AOL all have given filtering capabilities to their users. Even
lesser ISP's have followed suit. In addition, most have set up
"bulk" e-mail boxes where they deposit e-mails the ISP's
detect as being sent in large waves of mail.
It's time to join this war. Use filtering software or options
your ISP provides, report spam, and don't purchase items offered by
a spammer. The less effective spammers become the more likely they will
wither away with time.
E-mail is not like banner ads and pop-ups that have both fallen
from grace, each in a few years' time. Nobody needs a banner ad or
pop-up to run his life or business. Advertisers might bemoan their loss
of effectiveness and revenue earned from them. But we all need e-mail to
be a viable channel. We just have to get through a bad run of polluting
factors. And we'll outsurvive them because spammers are riding the
opportunistic tide. Eventually they'll be beached.
COPYRIGHT 2002 Sarah Stambler's Marketing with
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