Media Post reports on the future of email:
One of the issues raised repeatedly during Wednesday's opening sessions at the Email Insider Summit was: Whither email when a younger generation raised on Facebook, MySpace and social networking platforms enters the workforce?
Will they use email to communicate with their colleagues, plan meetings, strategize about PowerPoints, etc.? Or will Facebook--or more likely, a more professional type of social networking option--come to dominate intra-office communication?
The scenario may be a few years out, but not as many as some might think. One grad student at Ball State, Brandon Prebynski, appearing on the Summit's first panel, said he would be content to use Facebook solely at his next job. (A panel of Ball State students affiliated with the school's Center for Media Design offered marketers the opportunity to gain insight into changing behaviors among the college set.)
Nonetheless, online firm Habeas released its annual study of consumer attitudes Wednesday, which showed that email remains the "primary method of communications in personal and business capacities." (Two other Ball State students said they might have trouble using Facebook at the office because it doesn't quite meet a "professional" standard.)
The Habeas research (conducted by Ipsos) also led to the conclusion that email will continue to be preferable "despite the rise of online threats and the emergence of other communication channels and Web 2.0 applications."
Habeas CEO Des Cahill said the study "illustrates the relevance and longevity email has within the online ecosystem."
The survey found that 67% of respondents prefer email to communicate online, and 65% feel that will still be the case in five years. And vis-à-vis a younger generation "aging out of email," the survey found that 65% in the 18-to-34 demo "will favor email to communicate with businesses in five years."
...At the Summit, Alan Chapell, president of Chapell & Associates, said he has a separate Hotmail address he gives companies who insist on obtaining an email address when he signs up for something. The Habeas research found again that some 60% of respondents seem to follow at least part of Chapell's thinking, and have two or more email addresses, "giving a different address to entities they do not trust while maintaining separate accounts for trustworthy sources."
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