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  • Revisiting stamps for email

    I started agitating for this in 1997 and wrote about it in 2006. The problem with the magical medium of email is that it’s an open API. Anyone with a computer can plug into it, without anyone’s consent.

    This creates an asymmetric attention problem. The selfish, short-term-thinking sender benefits by emailing as many people as possible, and the recipients suffer.

    This doesn’t happen with traditional mail, because there’s a cost to sending it.

    With GPT arriving, expect that spam is going to increase 100x, and that it will be eerily personalized, invasive and persistent. That it will be really difficult to believe that an email isn’t junk, because there’s going to be so much junk, and it’s going to be harder to filter.

    And yet, email is powerful, and convenient and we’ve been using it for our entire careers. Is it doomed?

    Some apps are showing up that are trying to create a paywall for email. An unknown sender has to make a donation to charity (the recipient specifies the amount) to reach your inbox. People have tried this off and on for decades, but it’s hard. There are two problems with this being widely adopted.

    The first is that it creates an attention obligation on the part of the recipient. It’s socially awkward to sell access to your inbox and then ignore the email.

    The second is that there isn’t much of a network effect, and while a few people might adopt it, the problems with email don’t improve unless it’s widespread and persistent.

    Here’s an alternative:

    A simple plugin for gmail (and then, eventually other providers) that tags the email you send and receive.

    Senders who send more than 50 emails a day need to buy “stamps”, perhaps for a penny each. The money goes into escrow.

    Recipients can easily mark an email as unwanted. They can also upvote an email, which will send a signal that allows their peers to be sure they don’t ignore what they just got.

    If enough people mark your emails as unwanted, you lose your escrow, it goes to a worthy cause. If it’s legit, the escrow remains and you don’t have to buy more stamps.

    If a sender doesn’t use the system, they’re not going to be able to reach any of the people who do. So not many people have to be early adopters before it becomes widespread–if you want to reach most people (and you don’t know which people have it and which don’t) you’re going to need to turn on the tagging. It’s a tiny cost to pay for attention in a world where attention is scarce.

    Normal people won’t have to pay anything, and email will get better for them as senders and receivers. And businesses that mean well and do well ought to be happy to pay.

    If too many senders view the penny stamp as a chance to spam people (and lose the penny) then just increase the cost of the stamp to a nickel, etc. Pretty soon, algorithmic spamming is simply not going to pay off.

    Giving anonymous people and organizations the chance to steal your attention all day, at scale, seems like a worse idea every day.

  • How do I retarget on all social media platforms?

    When people come to my website and I setup GTM with all relevant pixels like Meta, Tiktok, Reddit, usw.. How do I retarget people who come for example from my Meta Ad on Tiktok? Do I need the email adress of the visitor or does the pixel know it without any further work from my side? submitted by /u/NicolasSchill [link] [comments]

  • The importance of mentorship at every stage of CX career development

    Being a woman in business is, more often than not, a fight. A fight to be taken seriously – to get that promotion and salary you deserve as much as your male colleagues. How difficult your path will be depends on the organisational culture, narratives, silent norms, and behavioural patterns you are exposed to.   This…
    The post The importance of mentorship at every stage of CX career development appeared first on Customer Experience Magazine.

  • Linkedin Campaign Question

    Hello everybody, So a client of mine is going to start a LinkedIn outreach campaign in which they will be sending out links to over 200 people. Now, I k now i need to create UTM links, and the client wants to treack EACH click, meaning if they send link number 3 to JOE they want to know that Joe clicked it. ​ Does that mean I need to create 200 UTM links? If so, is there a way to create them in bulk? Thank you so much in advance! submitted by /u/Forsaken-Ad-266 [link] [comments]

  • Guide to Salesforce Opportunity Teams

    Salespeople often view themselves as ‘lone wolves’ with the skills, experience, and motivation to close deals independently. Still, most times it’s not the effort of one single person to conclude a deal, especially a larger one. This is where team selling comes into play –… Read More

  • Bob Dobalina

    I considered myself someone with an encyclopedic knowledge of a narrow range of mid-1960s TV and certain strains of pop music as well.

    I was stunned, then, to hear the song Zilch for the first time recently.

    Mr. Dobalina, Mr. Bob Dobalina. It’s unforgettable. And it’s from the Monkees. Go figure.

    We’ve long passed the point where anyone can have an encyclopedic knowledge of anything. Even the encyclopedia doesn’t.

    The method, then, is simply to expose ourselves to a stream of provocations and interesting problems, and have a hunch on where to look up what we don’t already know.

  • This week in CX: even more AI-powered tools are coming; plus NICE & MaxContact

    Happy Friday! ‘This week in CX’ brings you the latest roundup of industry news. This week, we’re looking at the newest AI-powered tools in the business – including advancements within the CRM field, and SalesForce’s newest take with ChatGPT. MaxContact have also released new research on the financial and emotional impacts of bad CX, and we’re…
    The post This week in CX: even more AI-powered tools are coming; plus NICE & MaxContact appeared first on Customer Experience Magazine.

  • Need some help in understanding customer experience management tools

    Hello Everyone, I’m researching the challenges that companies face while gathering insights from customer complaints and feedback. My goal is to develop a tool that can help address these issues. I’d love to hear from anyone who has used any customer experience management tool in the past. What did you like or dislike about the tool you used? What features did you find most helpful? I’m also hoping to get some feedback from people who have experience with building similar tools. What were some of the biggest challenges you faced? submitted by /u/Fuzzy-Ad9195 [link] [comments]

  • Need some in building Customer Experience Management Tool

    Hello Everyone, I’m researching the challenges that companies face while gathering insights from customer complaints and feedback. My goal is to develop a tool that can help address these issues. I’d love to hear from anyone who has used any customer experience management tool in the past. What did you like or dislike about the tool you used? What features did you find most helpful? I’m also hoping to get some feedback from people who have experience with building similar tools. What were some of the biggest challenges you faced? submitted by /u/Fuzzy-Ad9195 [link] [comments]