Out With Outbound
Most of what’s described above is referred to as outbound marketing. It encompasses all the types of traditional advertising methods with which we are familiar: radio, television, newspapers, direct mail, billboards, sponsored sports, and even those coupon circulars that come in your mail. Just like that collegiate mailing packet, all this advertising is being sent OUT to you. Their commonality is that they are grounded in interruption. They interrupt your reading, viewing, or listening, and when they robocall your phone it goes beyond interruption into invasion. Librarians can be guilty of some of these infractions with their own marketing efforts, particularly when using email blasts to announce new resources and programming. When we do this we’re part of the marketing system that believes it can generate consumption by going out and grabbing people’s attention. We probably dislike it as much as the recipients of our outbound marketing do, but what else can we do to get their attention?Shift to Inbound
What we might do is follow the lead of some higher education institutions that are finally ditching their snail-mail information packages. They are making the switch to inbound marketing. It’s an approach that’s been gaining popularity in the marketing world since it was introduced several years ago by a firm called Hubspot, which also sells software to support its methodologies. Instead of reaching out to forcibly grab attention, inbound marketing is predicated on gaining permission to provide information after connecting with people because they want what you have to offer. In higher education the goal is to bring prospective students who want to learn about your institution IN to your physical or virtual space and have them request information about your college. How does it work? It mostly involves using Internet resources to put the institution into the information stream where potential students will find it, want to know more, and enter the website seeking more information. It makes use of blogs, video, podcasts, e-publications, social media marketing on platforms like Facebook and Twitter, and search optimization. By strategically placing yourself where your potential students are looking for information, they are drawn in, as opposed to pushing information out to anyone and everyone. If your college is focused on professional programs with a career orientation it’s counterproductive to mail information to students seeking a traditional liberal arts college. That’s a bit of a simplification, but it serves to show the difference between traditional outbound methods and the more contemporary inbound strategies.Relationships Make a Difference
While the transformation of marketing from pushing out ads to pulling in those who want what you have is interesting, I’m not sure how well this works for academic libraries that want and need to promote their people, resources, services, and programs. It makes perfect sense to avoid bombarding community members with promotions that interrupt their work flow. Who wants to be a spammer? What is different for academic librarians is the relationship with community members. It’s one thing to push content to strangers. It’s another to reach out to faculty members where there’s an established librarian liaison connection or with students who previously attended an instruction or consultation experience. Where personal relationships exist, some level of permission is established to allow for outbound techniques. That creates more possibilities for targeted marketing. You send the psychology faculty a list of new acquisition in that discipline, not every book being acquired—although a savvy subject specialist will know when to include materials from other fields based on a personal knowledge of research interests. What about everyone else in our communities with whom we’ve yet to establish a connection? What’s the best way to market library resources to those individuals?Library Marketing in Balance
To look for answers I dove into our library marketing literature. There’s no dearth of it, and it contains much good advice and many good ideas. There may be some promise to new emerging technologies that support inbound marketing. Library Journal reported on a few libraries that are experimenting with beacon technology. It’s a true permission-based strategy since community members must opt in to receive targeted marketing messages on their mobile devices. Though it also requires an app, it has the capacity to establish a connection with someone who is already in or near the library. That still leaves a gap in reaching out to those who are nowhere near the library. My take on library marketing is that any and all strategies are fair game and situational. Some will work better than others and depending on the situation, outbound may be more effective than inbound. Whatever we do, getting good results requires forethought and intentional design going into a strategic approach to library marketing. If the library staff lacks marketing expertise consider the following:We are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing
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Jill Wilson
One thing I did when doing outreach is I worked with the established connections and relationships to find out what worked for them. In other words, how did they hear about events and other relevant happenings? What was their preferred way of getting information? When I found out one of our graduate student departments relied heavily on an email list serv just for them, I made sure to either get on that list to post there, or have the list owner post on my behalf. It helped bring our numbers at events up and establish even more connections. Also, assessment is key -asking where students/faculty hear about events, library services, etc.Posted : Feb 26, 2016 11:13