Subscribers, Fans and Followers: Mobile Dependence Day
29 Jun
I just got an email today that ExactTarget just released another report in their fantastic Subscribers, Fans and Followers research series. Their ninth report is entitled Mobile Dependence Day and goes into depth about our collective dependence on our smartphones and other mobile devices. (You can see my previous reviews of the SFF research series if you want. I covered report #7 Social Mytbhusting here.) While I was reading the most recent report, I realized that I hadn’t blogged about the previous report: The Social Breakup, so this post consists of reviews of the two most recent reports as part of the Subscribers, Fans and Followers research. If you’re interested in downloading the reports for yourself, check out ET’s Subscribers, Fans and Followers page for the full reports.
Report No. 8: The Social Breakup
The eighth report in the Subscribers, Fans and Followers series focuses on the “social breakup” – how and why consumers “break up” with brands and stop following them via Facebook, Twitter and email. You might be surprised at how much similarity there is across all channels. Here are some of the highlights:
- Email
- 67% of subscribers hit the unsubscribe button to end the email relationship rather than just deleting (17%), reporting as spam (8%), ignoring (6%) or setting up a filter to auto-archive the message(2%)
- Top 3 reasons people unsubscribed from emails:
- Too many emails from the company
- Repetitive or boring content over time
- Email overload – too many emails in general, cleaning out the clutter
- Facebook
- When fans no longer want information from a brand they previously “liked”, 43% of them go to the brand’s page and click “unlike, 38% click the “X” in their newsfeed to remove them from the wall and 19% just ignore the posts.
- Top 3 reasons people “unliked” a brand on Facebook:
- Too many posts – too much frequency can overwhelm users walls
- Repetitive or boring content over time
- They only “liked” the brand because of a promotion, discount or deal offered to fans, and “unliked” once they got what they wanted.
- Twitter
- Nearly half of consumers who created a Twitter account no longer use it with 52% saying they found Twitter to be pointless, 38% saying it became boring and 23% thinking that Twitter was too chaotic.
- Top 3 reasons people stopped following a brand on Twitter:
- Repetitive or boring content over time
- Tweet stream became overloaded with marketing posts, wanted to clean up
- Too many posts – too much frequency can overwhelm users tweet streams
Notice the striking similarity between why people unsubscribe, unlike and unfollow brands? While there are different strategies to employ for brand to get the most out of email, Facebook and Twitter, online consumers – across the board – seem to all be saying the same thing when it comes to ending their relationship with a brand’s digital initiatives: don’t talk too much and keep the content interesting.
Report No. 9: Mobile Dependence Day
The ninth report in the Subscribers, Fans and Followers series really focuses on our increasing dependence on our smartphones and other mobile devices. Even within the past year, the share of US consumers with smartphones (as opposed to feature phones) has grown dramatically. Here are some of the high points about what it means for interactive marketers:
- 89% of US consumers 15+ own a cell phone. 41% of those have smartphones
- Android: 33%
- iPhone: 25%
- Blackberry: 19%
- Other: 23%
- Smartphone’s Big 5 (the five most frequently used functions on today’s smartphones):
- Phone Calls
- Texting
- Internet
- How important is the smartphone to people who own and use one? Here is the percentage of people who would (if forced to choose) rather keep their smartphone than the following items:
- Game Console: 72%
- Dishwasher: 46%
- Laptop: 40%
- Microwave: 34%
- Refrigerator: 13%
- Car: 8%
The rest of the report gives recommendations of ways you can integrate your marketing efforts across all three communications channels and is definitely worth a read.
Have you looked through ExactTarget’s Subscribers, Fans and Followers series? What do you think about their findings?

While there were several great presentations during ExactTarget’s Connections 2010 Conference, one of my favorite sessions was the Subscribers Fans & Followers: Cross Channel Success With Email, Facebook and Twitter session hosted by Jeff Rohrs (@





