When the Funnel Becomes the Bucket
Recently I wrote that the distribution of information had always been a funnel but it had now turned right side up. The mouth of the funnel is wide open and consumers are publishing because it is easy and they have opinions. The good brands are building these funnels, advertising their communication portals (Facebook,etc) , attracting consumers, collecting opinions, engaging, finding their voices and constructively inviting/channeling consumers further down into the brand storyline. During this process the brands are quietly measuring their effectiveness, learning, and becoming much better communicators as consumers elect to engage more deeply. They are collecting excellent data on Influencers, athletes and active consumers as the information travels down the funnel.

In recent conversations I have been painfully reminded that many me-too brands in the Outdoor Industry are not building solid funnels but building buckets with holes and no bottom.

How? Well, these companies crow that they have a Web Site, Facebook Page, are on Twitter, YouTube, and Flickr.
And consumers are initially engaging…entering the bucket. But they are not directed or invited to go anywhere. They just sit in the bucket, quickly draining to the bottom…without direction.
And then an analyst from Channel Signal investigates. We find that they had good sign-up for the Facebook page, a decent following on Twitter, and that YouTube and Flickr had good traffic, but that it fell off quickly.
Why did the traffic fall off? Because these companies did not allocate the resources to engage. Employees were not assigned to respond to consumers, and direct them to the next point of interest. Consumer questions and comments went unanswered. They were not invited to go to Facebook or the Website, or YouTube, or a User Group. And because there was no natural momentum of engagement, no funnel, consumers were stranded and then took the easy way out….quickly out the bottom of the bucket. They were invited to the conversation and then nobody talked to them.
So they didn’t stick around. And they took all of their knowledge about the brand with them.
A study by the Chief Marketing Council shows that 38 percent of the 480 executives in the industries surveyed say their companies have no programs in place to track or propagate positive word of mouth among customers. And only 29 percent rate highly their ability to handle and resolve customer problems or complaints
All that money to make products that attract consumers. All that money to sell into retail. All that money for advertising to attract consumers. All that money to set up conversation channels. And then the pay-off…consumers responding online by engaging in one of the channels. And…
And silence. All that wonderful potential data about consumers and what they like and don’t like about your brand and products…out the bottom of the bucket. And all those potential Influencers, gone.
Never to be captured again.
Say goodbye to measuring ROI.


November 24th, 2009 at 5:56 pm
[...] by information overload” is not a pretty thought…(visual from Paul Kirwin of Channel Signal) who reminds in a different but still applicable context that when the info funnel becomes a bucket, [...]
March 17th, 2010 at 12:49 pm
Twitter stepped in and took over the real-time communication aspect of social media, something that even news websites had failed to execute. The witnesses and participants of events were now ‘tweeting’ their experiences as they were occurring, feeding audiences with pure insight and uncensored content. Although Twitter feels like a lose end waiting to be tied, its unusually exponential world-wide development will maintain its community and – more importantly – create a connection among audiences that neither Facebook nor any other media can get close to reach.
March 18th, 2010 at 7:40 am
Excellent point. Real time sm has put increasing pressure on companies to respond. Waiting can be dicey.
April 19th, 2010 at 1:38 am
How are you, excellant writing.
April 20th, 2010 at 9:19 am
Thank you Treme. I continue to work hard at the writing. Have for a long time.