|
My Response to Spam
By Peter DeHaan, Ph.D.
September 2004
Do
you like spam? Does anyone?
I’m not talking about the luncheon meat product SPAM®, which is
produced by Hormel Foods Corporation, but rather the inundation of unwanted
messages that increasingly plagues us. Unless
you happen to be one of those who delight in propagating spam messages, I am
confident that you concur with me that spam is a problem.
Unfortunately,
defining spam is easier said than done. What
constitutes spam to some may be acceptable communications to others.
Just as in 1964 when Justice Potter Stewart
famously said of obscenity, “I can't define it, but I know it when I see
it,” the same can be said of spam. In
similar fashion, I too, can quickly spot spam, but coming up with a concise,
compelling, and complete clarification is an elusive endeavor.
Nevertheless, here is my definition: Spam is an unwanted message that is
offensive, illegal, or intrusive.
Spam
email messages can take on many forms of varying severity: pornographic,
obscene, offensive, illegal, scams and cons, viruses, virus warnings, chain
letters, sales solicitations, undesired attachments (especially when they are
large), and even thoughtless email forwards.
It is safe to say that email spam has reached endemic proportions,
leading some to say that email use, as ubiquitous as it currently is, will be
decimated in the near future. Others,
however, boldly predict that the increasing flow of spam will be reversed,
curtailed, and stopped within two years. My
view is that reality will end up in the middle of these two extremes.
Some
claim that filters are the key, but attempts to filter spam often have the side
effect of blocking legitimate messages. I
have experienced this on both the sending and receiving side of the equation.
At one time, I made extensive use of Microsoft Outlook’s “rules” to
search for and automatically move spam to a separate folder, which I reviewed
once a week. Invariably, I would
find legitimate messages in my spam folder, some of which were time-critical.
Also, I invested an excessive amount of time writing new rules to capture
additional spam that had been designed to bypass spam filters such as mine.
My conclusion is that it takes less time to simply delete spam messages
as they arrive than to try to maintain an effective filter.
Even though about two-thirds of my email each day is spam, I only spend a
couple minutes a day deleting it. Also,
the interruption caused by spam email (assuming you batch your email) is
negligible.
Now,
let’s return to my definition of spam: Spam is an
unwanted message that is offensive, illegal, or intrusive.
Notice that I did not used the word email.
Although spam messages are associated with email, I submit that any
unwanted message is spam, requiring time for a response and causing an
interruption of more important activities. Consider
the following:
Popup Ads:
When surfing the Web, or at least certain Websites and portals, popup ads become
a navigational hazard. The more
annoying ones blast you with music or sound.
The infuriating ones are next to impossible to close.
Popup
ads, we are told, are used because enough people click on them to justify the
ads’ continued use. I must admit
that even I have clicked on a few myself, albeit accidentally.
The
time required to deal with popup ads, unless you are a hard-core Web surfer or
have low sales resistance, is minor. The
interruption to efficiently navigating the World Wide Web is moderate.
Direct Mail:
The concept of an unwanted message as applied to direct mail has been given the
label of junk mail. It used to be
that I would sort through the mail when it arrived, cull the junk mail, and
throw it in the trash. But now, with
concerns of identity theft rampant, I find myself opening every piece of junk
mail, pulling out anything with personal information on it, and shredding it.
This takes time and is an added annoyance.
I suppose that this effort averages me about five minutes a day.
As such, junk mail actually takes more time to deal with than spam email
messages. Fortunately, this
processing of junk mail is not a true interruption, as I can handle it at a time
I choose.
Door-to-Door:
Incredibly, I have experienced a slight increase in door-to-door solicitations
over the past year. While I am
proficient at hitting the delete key for email, closing pop-up ads, shredding
junk mail, and ending a telemarketing call, I find it difficult to close the
door on someone. After telling phone
representatives that I am not interested, I have no problem hanging up if they
keep jabbering, yet I have never shut my front door on someone who won’t take
no for an answer. Fortunately, this
doesn’t happen too often. Even so,
the interruption is a key annoyance.
Television and Radio:
These are broadcast mediums, in which content cannot be targeted, but is
intended for the masses. Radio
commercials occur between 12 and 16 minutes every hour and with the average
adult reportedly listening to the radio three hours per day, which results in
about 45 minutes of unwanted messages per day.
With
television, there is even more time devoted to commercials.
Surveys consistently put the number of commercial minutes per hour for TV
at 16 and higher (over 20 for daytime TV). With
various studies claiming three to five hours of TV watching per day, this adds
up to an hour or more of unwanted messages each day.
Granted, we have trained ourselves to do productive things during these
times (grab a snack, run to the bathroom, or take out the trash) or do
semi-productive things, like channel surf or get an update on the score of the
game; a great deal of time is still wasted.
Adding
radio and TV commercials together approach or exceed two hours of unwanted
messages a day. Isn’t this another
form of spam? Yes, but one that we
have been conditioned to accept and tolerate.
Many
readers of Connections Magazine are involved in outbound telemarketing and some
are in call centers that are exclusively devoted to outbound.
Unfortunately, for most consumers, an outbound telemarketing call is
unwanted and therefore it fits the previous definition of spam.
(Before any readers from outbound call centers get angry, please read
the rest of the article.)
With
the advent of the national do-not-call (DNC) law, many consumers, like me, have
registered our residential numbers. This
has stopped all phone solicitations to my home.
The side effect of the DNC law is that those outbound telemarketing call
centers (who haven’t switched over to inbound) are looking to do more
business-to-business work. In the
past year, the number of telemarketing calls to my office has increased from a
couple a month to several per day! There
are even some days when the number of unwanted calls exceeds the number of
wanted calls.
My broad and all-inclusive definition of spam is the consumer side
of me speaking. While most readers
will concur that the words “offensive” and “illegal” have their proper
place in the definition of spam, the words “unwanted” and “intrusive”
may go too far. Indeed, applying
this definition, virtually every marketing effort, no matter how well designed
and executed would fall victim to one of these two words.
From the business side of me, I see a legitimate need for
businesses to be able to engage in cost-effective and results-producing
marketing efforts. Politicians know
that too, but realized that it was politically advantageous to dramatically
curtail outbound telemarketing by enacting a national DNC law.
In short, they were willing to effectively destroy an industry, increase
the marketing costs of most companies, and further retard a slowly recovering
economy for the sole purpose of political expediency.
(Note that Congress exempted themselves from their own restrictions,
giving testament to their belief in the effectiveness of outbound
telemarketing.)
Unsolicited faxing is currently illegal and more onerous
restrictions are scheduled in the near future.
Currently, there are advocates for legislation to do to direct mail what
DNC did to outbound calling – effectively stop it.
There are already serious calls for a “do not email” law (not that it
would work). Why?
Because these, too, are politically expedient, albeit bad for business
and the economy as a whole. With
fax, mail, and email as targets, could all
forms of proactive marketing be far behind?
We all need marketing. Businesses
need to promote products or services and consumers need to be informed about
options. You can help; quite simply,
make sure that your message is not viewed as spam.
To read other articles written by Peter DeHaan,
go to From
The Publisher or check out his blog at
http://blog.peterdehaan.com. In addition to publishing Connections Magazine
and AnswerStat magazine (for hospital and medical related call centers), Peter
also publishes several related websites, including
MyArticleArchive.com.
He may
be reached at 866-668-6695, dehaan@connectionsmagazine.com
or www.PeterDeHaan.com.
Return
to List of Articles || Read more articles at MyArticleArchive.com
|